Preamble

The House met Eleven of the Clock, Mr. SPEAKER in the Chair.

PRIVATE BUSINESS.

Beckenham Urban District Council Bill, Glamorganshire Canal Company Bill,

As amended, considered; to be read the Third time.

Oral Answers to Questions — CANADA (ELECTRICITY CONTRACTS, ONTARIO).

Sir WALDRON SMITHERS: 1.
asked the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs whether his attention has been directed to the proposals recently put forward by Mr. M. F. Hepburn, the Premier of Ontario, designed to make void and unenforceable the contracts for the supply of electric power entered into by the Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Commission with certain Quebec hydro-electric distributing companies; and will he call the attention of the Canadian Government to the grave nature of these proposals and to the necessity of maintaining the sanctity of contracts, and say what steps he proposes to take to protect the interests of British investors?

The SECRETARY of STATE for DOMINION AFFAIRS (Mr. J. H. Thomas): I understand that, a Bill has been introduced by the Premier of Ontario in the Ontario Legislature declaring certain specified long-term contracts between the Hydro-Electric Power Commission and a number of generating companies in Quebec for the supply of large quantities of electrical power to the Commission "to be and always to have been illegal, void and unenforceable" chiefly on the ground that they were negotiated without the consent of the Ontario Municipalities concerned. My hon. Friend will appreciate that the matter is entirely one for the Canadian Government, and I under-
stand that this matter is already receiving their careful attention. I will convey to them the anxiety which has been expressed by the hon. Member.

Sir W. SMITHERS: In view of the fact that recently the value of these bonds has fallen by 51,000,000 dollars, and that the action of Mr. Hepburn deals a serious blow at the credit of Canada as a whole, will my right hon. Friend ask the Canadian Government if, in their own interest they can take steps to disallow this proposed legislation?

Mr. THOMAS: I have already said that it is not for me to advise the Canadian Government. I cannot do better than quote from a statement made on behalf of the Canadian Government by Mr. Meighen. The relevant passage is as follows:
Obviously, it is too soon to make a statement, even if this were the proper body in which to make it. On the one hand, the Government (that is the Canadian Government) would have to consider the interests of the whole Dominion and the threat and challenge to its integrity. On the other hand, it would have to consider the all but universal wisdom of allowing every Government to take the consequences of its own acts.

Sir W. SMITHERS: Is my right hon. Friend aware that the Prime Minister of Canada, Mr. Bennett, is reported to have said that this is a bare face robbery?

Mr. THOMAS: If that is so, I am not aware of it. I should have thought that that would be the best statement and much more important than any I can make.

Oral Answers to Questions — ALIENS (DEATHS, LONDON).

Captain WATERHOUSE: (by Private Notice) asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether he has any statement to make concerning the death, in London, of Dr. Dora Fabian and Fraulein Matilda Wurm?

The UNDER-SECRETARY of STATE for the HOME DEPARTMENT (Captain Crookshank): No, Sir. These deaths will be investigated by the coroner in the ordinary course.

Captain WATERHOUSE: In view of the statements made by responsible organs of the Press this morning, connecting these deaths with the activities of foreign, secret, political societies in this country,
may I ask my hon. and gallant Friend to give the House an assurance that every step will be taken to ascertain the facts in order that we may be quite sure, and he may make it clear, that political crime will not be tolerated in England?

Captain CROOKSHANK: Yes, Sir; it is the duty of the coroner to find out the facts.

Mr. EMMOTT: But is it not the function of the coroner to discover the cause of death, and not to enter into these other matters that have been mentioned by my hon. Friend?

Captain CROOKSHANK: That is quite true, but, if the allegations to which my hon. and gallant Friend has referred have anything in them, they would naturally come before the coroner.

Captain WATERHOUSE: Will my hon. and gallant Friend give an assurance that he will investigate these allegations, in view of the fact that the "Times" and other responsible newspapers are putting a sinister connection on the deaths of these ladies?

Mr. ISAAC FOOT: Assuming that the coroner feels that his duty confines him to ascertaining the cause of death, will the Home Office recognise any responsibility in respect of these statements and
make the enquiry for which the hon. and gallant Member asks?

Orders of the Day — GOVERNMENT OF INDIA BILL.

Considered in Committee [SEVENTEENTH DAY—Progress, 4th April.]

[Sir DENNIS HERBERT in the Chair.]

CLAUSE 238.—(Compensation for loss of rights.)

11.11 a.m.

Mr. CHURCHILL: I beg to move "That the Chairman do report Progress, and ask leave to sit again."
There has this morning been published in the public Press a document to which reference was made yesterday by my hon. and gallant Friend the Member for Wycombe (Sir A. Knox), and the public is now seized of that document. This is the covering memorandum prepared by a delegation of Indian Civil servants, including two Secretaries to Government, two judges and one Indian sub-divisional officer on behalf of the Bengal Civil Service, a memorandum which formed the introduction to and the foundation of the memorial upon these matters now dealt with in this Clause and other Clauses with which we are immediately concerned, relating to such questions as the value of the rupee and so forth.
This memorial and the covering letter are now published, and, as we know, the final memorial has been endorsed by the united Civil Service of India. For the first time, we are in possession of the real views of the Indian Civil Service in regard to this Bill. I have no knowledge of how this document has come to be published, and I take no responsibility whatever for the fact that it has been published; but the House is bound to acquaint itself with the facts and to try to Debate this matter with knowledge of the truth. Anyone who chooses to read these documents will see that the whole of this policy is viewed with the gravest apprehension and fear, dislike and disapproval, by the great mass of the Indian Civil Service. I see the Lord President is present. I must remind him that he said on 29th April,1933:
The overwhelming balance of opinion in the Civil Service in India to-day is in favour of these reforms.
I beg my right hon. Friend to acquaint himself with the facts which are now dis-
closed. I know it would be to him a very great source of self-reproach if he had unwittingly, but none the less powerfully, misled the country and the House upon a great matter of fact. Anyone who chooses to see the views which these people hold and which they interchange among themselves confidentially but with all the frankness of experts and people in a service facing common dangers and difficulties—anyone who chooses to do that, will see how utterly wrong it was and is to-day to say that the Indian Civil Service is in favour of these reforms. it is quite true that the civil servants in the main address themselves to specific questions which affect their tenure, pay, promotion, and transfer of their salaries to the Sterling exchange, to pay for the education of their children and matters of that kind. But no one can read this document without seeing the wreck and ruin which is being brought on the whole of the great Civil Service on which the civilisation and scientific progress of India depend. I must draw attention to one point and one point only in this document to show how grave are the revelations which are now for the first time made. This is paragraph 35:

Mr. ATTLEE: Will the right hon. Gentleman say from what paper he is quoting?

Mr. CHURCHILL: The "Morning Post."

HON. MEMBERS: Ah!

Mr. CHURCHILL: What does the hon. Member mean by "Ah"? I suppose if I had said it was the "Daily Herald," he would have said "Oh" The journalists on the "Morning Post," the proprietors, the authorities, the editors of the" Morning Post "are just as honourable as those of the "Daily Herald" and have just as much right to take part in discussions of this kind.

Mr. ATTLEE: I never suggested anything to the contrary. I only wished to say that I had gathered from the right hon. Gentleman that the statement referred to appeared in the Press generally. I wished to know from the right hon. Gentleman in what paper it had appeared, as I had not had the privilege of seeing it this morning.

Mr. CHURCHILL: Perhaps I was misled by the apparently scoffing and contemptuous note which seemed to me to
ring through the interjection of the hon. Member, but, since he says that that was not present in his mind, and that he was merely asking whether this had appeared in one particular paper or in the whole Press, let me say that if I had realised that, I certainly should not have felt it incumbent upon me to retort as I did. Pray let him consider that part of our. interchanges as at an end. I must read this passage, however, and it is the only quotation which I am going to make:
It is probably our duty as Civil Servants to represent these things especially as we are only experts—and, therefore, should not have been consulted but rather gagged—a result of which was that Mr. Baldwin in a public speech, claimed that as we had expressed no dissent, we must agree on the whole scheme. In point of fact we are admittedly not allowed to express any opinions. An honest authority would have removed the ban in a matter of this Imperial importance.
Then follows this extraordinary sentence:
Indiscretions in favour of the White Paper have been committed and this breach of the rules of our Services has not been without its improvement in the professional position of the tactful officers.
Could one have anything more serious or more direct than that statement. I well remember two years 'ago when I was pointing out that patronage had been used to influence the general compliance of the Civil Service with- these reforms I was interrupted by the hon. Member for Kidderminster (Sir J. Wardlaw-Milne), and what a wave of shocked indignation was showered on anyone who could make such a suggestion. But here I find it in cold blood, set out by two judges, two Secretaries to the Government and a sub-divisional officer, delegated by their own classes to prepare a, memorial which was to be submitted to the Government. It makes the charge in the most plain and specific manner. It shows that the Service has been gagged and shows that they have not been allowed to express their opinions. It shows that, in consequence of that, they have been claimed to be in favour of this Measure when no one can read this internal evidence without being absolutely convinced that they are deeply disquieted by and in the main opposed to it. I think I am entitled to ask the Secretary of State to deal with this matter now. We do not wish to be involved in a succession of detailed discussions on the different aspects of the Civil
Service, on Clause 238 and the Clauses which immediately follow it. These discussions would be only more protracted if the general matter which is in all our minds could not be fully and plainly discussed. Naturally, portions of the topic would refer to many of the Amendments and Clauses which are being moved, and I believe it will actually shorten the course of business if the general issue is discussed as it can be and if we hear from the Secretary of State what he has to say upon it.
Therefore, I venture to submit this Motion, but I do ask the Secretary of State and my right hon. Friend the Lord President of the Council to consider this. 'Suppose that up to the present you have been misinformed upon the feeling of the Indian Civil Service. Suppose that you are now confronted with the fact that you have been misinformed— that you have been receiving information, only from the higher ranks and that, the real opinion of those in contact with Indian affairs and responsible for Indian administration, is very different from that of the high officials who are brought into contact with the representatives of His Majesty's Government. Suppose that to be true. Suppose it is shown that, just as the Princes dislike the scheme, just as India has rejected it, so with the civil servants whose silent acquiescence you most unwarrantably interpreted as approval. Suppose it should be ascertained that they are deeply concerned and thoroughly distrustful of the great undertaking which is now being pushed forward. May I not ask that even now, at the eleventh hour, relief might be given throughout India and this country by the withdrawal of a Measure which, however conceived, has from every angle been shown to fail in its essential purposes.

11.23 a.m.

The SECRETARY of STATE for INDIA (Sir Samuel Hoare): My right hon. Friend has taken upon his shoulders a very heavy responsibility in raising this question this morning, and in raising it in the manner in which he has raised it. The "Morning Post" has also taken upon itself a heavy responsibility, which may react very seriously against the Services in India and the men on the spot, in publishing what I shall show to be a confidential document, drawn up by three or four individuals,
and not accepted either by the Bengal branch of the Central Civil Service Association or by the Central Civil Ser- vice Association itself. Some days ago, I was confidentially sent, not this document but extracts from it. As soon as I read the extracts, it appeared to me that they would be unlikely to be endorsed by either the Bengal branch or the central body of the Civil Service Association. As anybody who reads the document in the "Morning Post" will see, the style of the document bears, on the face of it, evidence of being a document drawn up by certain individuals but not likely to be approved by a responsible body like the Bengal branch or the Central Association.
As soon, however, as I received the extracts I at once telegraphed to the Governor of Bengal to ask him to give me information with reference to it, and Sir John Anderson's information con firmed my own surmise. Sir John Anderson tells me that the document published by the "Morning Post" was, so he understands, drawn up by three or four individuals. It was one of several drafts put eventually before the Bengal branch of the Indian Civil Service Association. It was not accepted by the branch nor was it accepted by the central organization of the Civil Service in India. The only document accepted by the branch was the document to which I referred in answer to a question by the hon. and gallant Member for Bourne- mouth (Sir H. Croft) yesterday, the document which I have actually put in the Library of the House. Hon. Members will see, when they compare that official document with this expression of individual opinion, that there is all the difference in the world between the two documents.
The only official expression of opinion by the Bengal branch or by the Central Association is contained in the document that I have put in the Library of the House, and I am not prepared to take into account the individual views of three or four officials when those views were not accepted by their service organizations, when in any case the document was a confidential document between themselves and their colleagues, when somehow or other, I know not how, that confidential document has got into the hands of my right hon. Friend and of the "Morning Post", and when I
am quite sure that the very men who may have drawn up this confidential document and, I am even more sure, the members of the Civil Service Associations as a whole in India, will very much resent the publication of an individual confidential document of this kind, which is certain, which is as certain as anything can be, to stir up unnecessary bitterness against the Services in India and particularly against individual members of the Services in Bengal, where in any case they are faced with a very difficult problem. I therefore can only express my regret that my right hon. Friend has given countenance to what I believe to be, in the interests of the Services themselves, a very injurious act in publishing a confidential document of that kind.
Finally, I would say to the Committee that it does not represent the views either of the Bengal Association or of the Central Association. Their views are set out in the document which I have put in the Library. So far as the Services in India are concerned, they have throughout these discussions adopted the attitude that we should expect them to adopt. They have not interfered in questions of general policy, but, quite rightly, they have put before me, they have put before the Joint Select Committee, and they have put before the various Round Table Conferences their views on specific service points. That is perfectly justifiable, and I feel that I am expressing the general views of the Services when I say that they would regard it as improper, and not only as improper but unwise too, as Services, to express opinions either for or against the general policy of the Government.

11.29 a.m.

Mr. CHURCHILL: May I be permitted to say a word on the rather personal aspect of this question. The Secretary of State said that I had taken the responsibility for publishing this document.

Sir S. HOARE: No, for giving countenance to it.

Mr. CHURCHILL: I have no responsibility for publishing this document. I never heard of it, unlike the Secretary of State, until this morning, when I opened my morning newspaper, but I immediately saw its significance. The fact that it is a confidential document which has somehow or
other now become available for the guidance of the public only adds, as the noble Lord the Member for Oxford University (Lord H. Cecil) pointed out in another connection, to its importance as affording guidance to the Committee, and I certainly take the responsibility of bringing before the Committee all pertinent matters which are made public and which seem to be necessary and essential for the formation of the opinion of the Committee upon the matters which are under discussion. To suggest that, because a revelation is made, because a lightning flash illumines a dark and doubtful landscape, no word of warning should ever be based upon such a revelation is too foolish. Since when has Parliament denied itself all sources of information which are placed at its disposal? On what ground am I to be told that I am giving countenance to this procedure or to what has been done, as was my right, when I bring it to the notice of the Committee? Is the right hon. Gentleman afraid that the Committee will take notice of it? I am sure he would not say that. Then it is obviously right, and, as I say, people must keep their secrets. If they allow their secret matters, whether they be Princes or civil servants, to pass into the public attention, so that they are printed by hundreds of thousands and scattered throughout the country, it is impossible to say that Parliament is prohibited from taking notice, that Parliament must go forward blindfold, as it were, While the real facts are disclosed elsewhere. So much on the personal point.
Nothing could be more legitimate and proper than my action in bringing this forward. If it were suggested that it was a fabrication and so forth, the Secretary of State would have disposed of it by saying so, and that would have been an advantage, because a misstatement would have been corrected. If, on the other hand, it is true, then it ought to be read by everybody who wants to know the truth and not merely by people who wish to continue on a false basis, pushing forward their policies on a basis which does not represent the actual facts which rule and the actual facts which should be before the Committee. I trust I did not give any suggestion to the Committee that this document in its present form
was approved by the whole body of the Civil Service in India or by the Bengal Civil Service.

HON. MEMBERS: You did.

Sir S. HOARE: You said "the covering letter".

Mr. CHURCHILL: I am quite content to describe it as the basis, as it certainly is, on which the official memorial was framed. The time has been too short to make a meticulous examination of it clause by clause, but the substantive recommendations of this document in very many cases are embodied in the official memorial which has been placed in the Library.

Sir S. HOARE: I must interrupt my right hon. Friend. That is not the case. The only points mentioned in the Service memorial are connected with Service questions. They have nothing whatever to do with general policy, but my right hon. Friend is attacking us this morning on the basis of general policy.

Mr. CHURCHILL: But it is upon the general policy that this document is particularly informing, and the fact that Service recommendations which are put forward in this document find their repetition in the official memorial which has been sent forward shows the authority which lay behind those who were preparing the basis upon which the whole of the associations were to make their address to the Government. This was the working material out of which the report was to be presented. Naturally, the kind of expressions which I have read out here would not be sent up to the Government by a body of civil servants. Naturally, that would not be the form in which a memorial would be put forward. The roughnesses would be smoothed away, and instead of anything likely to give offence to their powerful superiors, smooth words would be put in wherever possible, but the fact that this was the basis and was prepared by responsible people in touch with the whole body working out the basis upon which the whole body would make its report invests this document with authority. So, by unexpected means, by means for which I take no responsibility whatever, except for bringing it before the Committee, we have become acquainted with widespread views throughout the Indian
Civil Service which otherwise would have been veiled in silence and actually represented as approval of the policy of the Government. The right hon. Gentleman is quite entitled to make the answer he has made and to say that he can only deal with official matters which have been put before him, but I am clear that Parliament must study this matter and must weigh from the point of view of its authenticity and its consequences anything that is said in this most important, most revealing and most valuable document.

11.36 a.m.

Mr. ATTLEE: The Committee is in a little difficulty when a matter which has appeared in one newspaper is brought up. The right hon. Gentleman started off by saying that the country was now seized of it. The fact is that the whole country does not read the "Morning Post." Personally, I cannot afford to buy all the newspapers, and the "Morning Post" is one that I do not read first thing in the morning. Then we come here and have this brought up, and a discussion takes place on a number of statements made in a particular journal. If that is to happen very often, we had better have the "Morning Post" attached to the Blue Papers and sent out to Members. We are in a very difficult position. I have no knowledge of the substance of the remarks made in this document of which the right hon. Gentleman has been speaking. We have only his estimate as to its importance. We have not seen it. We do not know who are the people who wrote it or anything about them. On the other hand, those who have been on the Joint Select Committee have had representations made from all these various organisations, and we have to take what they gave as official evidence as standing until we get something official in contradiction.
There is a further point on this matter. We oppose this Bill from a different point of view from that of the right hon. Gentleman. We would never say that this House should be bound to accept the opinions of the Civil Service in India. We have to give very great weight to them, but neither this country nor India is governed by the opinions of the Civil Service. When we have a matter of this kind everybody knows that there are civil servants who take one view and civil
servants who take another view, but I am bound to say that the right hon. Gentleman in his statement gave me the impression that this statement had been approved not only by the Bengal Branch, but by the Central Civil Service Association. If that be so, it makes it a serious matter because that is a great body of opinion. If, as a matter of fact, it is a couple of judges and two or three civil servants who have put their views forward—well, we have had the views of a couple of judges and civil servants on one side and another before and we have to weigh up one against the other. I certainly thought when the right hon. Gentleman moved to report Progress that this was a matter in which we had the opinion of the whole Civil Service. I suggest that he might have waited a day or two and given us an opportunity of seeing this statement if it is only a matter of private correspondence between two or three civil servants.

11.40 a.m.

Mr. AMERY: I only rise to make an appeal to my right hon. Friend the Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) to spare us any further revelations. For 12 months now my right hon. Friend has come down from time to time to this House with some portentous revelation which appears somewhere or other in the public Press. Inspired by nothing but his stern sense of duty and nothing but a regard for the honour of this House and the future welfare of India, he comes forward and discovers, for instance, that Lord Derby and my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State had been guilty of a crime and misdemeanour against the honour of this House and the authority of a Select Committee of Parliament. That was discovered to be a mare's nest.

Mr. CHURCHILL: So little was it a mare's nest that the facts were stated by the Prime Minister to be a matter on which no disagreement existed. So little was the procedure one which was a mare's nest that we have at this moment a committee sitting in order to repair breaches in procedure so as to escape from so-called mares' nests.

Mr. AMERY: I repeat that in my view it was a pure mare's nest. The whole of the charges were dissipated into thin air. Then we had another great revelation about the Princes. I would say to my right hon. Friend, "Put not
your trust in princes." We have now another revelation brought forward under the impression that here was the considered view, not only on Service questions, but on the whole of this measure, of the great Indian Civil Service, except perhaps a few people living on Olympian heights; and then, within five minutes, blown sky-high and shown to be an entirely unofficial production of a few individuals who, like others in this House, take a strong and partisan view. That revelation again is shown to be a mare's nest. All I rise to do is to suggest to my right hon. Friend that three times is enough. Enough is sufficient for a feast, and if he wants to make further use of these revelations, let him publish them in a new Book of Revelations with the sub-title "Epping Mares' Nests.

11.43 a.m.

Colonel GRETTON: I rise to put a different point of view from that of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Sparkbrook (Mr. Amery). I am concerned with the procedure of this House and the proper discussion of this part of the Bill which is now before us. From that point of view, I suggest that the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) has ample justification for bringing this matter before the Committee. I understand that the. Secretary of State laid a document in the Library of the House for the inspection of Members. It was the last available authority on this important subject. It was only laid to-day, I understand, and none of us have had the time or opportunity to examine it. There is a very real and pertinent relation between the document in the Library and the publication in the Press this morning. They both relate to the same subject, and the publication in the Press certainly emphasises the weight and importance and the necessity of the document which has been placed in the Library by the Secretary of State.
May I submit one general consideration to the Committee? In this matter of the Civil Service we have a special and very weighty responsibility. The Civil Service has been engaged in its work in reliance upon the terms which have hitherto prevailed and which have had
the sanction of Parliament and the whole authority of the Government behind them. We are now proposing changes which are very vital in this matter. No one will deny that serious changes are being made, and we ought to examine them in view of the responsibility of Parliament and this country to those who serve us well in order to see that the conditions of those changes are honourable and just to those for whom we have hitherto been responsible. Therefore, I submit that my right hon. Friend did quite right in calling attention to this matter, in view of the important document to which the Secretary of State has referred, and that we should be well advised to postpone further discussion on the status of the Civil Service until we have been able to examine all the latest information at our disposal. Meanwhile, I venture to say that greater importance attaches to the publication of the communication which appears in the "Morning Post" than the right hon. Member for Sparkbrook seems to think. He pours scorn upon everything with which he does not agree, but, after all, the case against his opinions deserves to be heard, and whatever there is in deserves to have full weight given to it before a, decision is taken.

Earl WINTERTON: I desire to raise a point of Order. I wish to ask how it is possible for the Committee to continue to consider a document, which is being more widely quoted in every speech, which is not officially before us, and from which it is not in order to quote. I respectfully ask you whether, if this discussion is to continue, you will waive the rule of the House which forbids one to read from a newspaper, in order to enable those of us who wish to take part in the discussion and who have not read the "Morning Post" to read it and to quote from it. I respectfully ask you whether we can discuss a document which is not officially before the House.

The CHAIRMAN: I think the Noble Lord will, on consideration, agree with me that the rule against reading newspapers in 'the House does not prohibit hon. Members from reading this particular newspaper in reference to the matter under debate. With regard to the other point, it would be beyond the scope of the debate to discuss the document in question in any detail. The only point which can be discussed on this Motion
to report Progress is the short point that a certain document, the nature of which has been disclosed in the course of the debate, has appeared this morning, and the question whether, by reason of the appearance of that document, the Committee should resolve that I should report Progress or not.

Earl WINTERTON: I am very much obliged for your ruling. It clarifies the position so far as I am concerned.

Colonel GRETTON: I entirely accept your ruling, Sir Dennis, and I would venture to call the attention of the Committee to the fact that I have not committed any breach of Order, and it would have been better, I submit, if an old Member had been allowed to come to the point which he was putting before attention was called to a possible breach of the Rules of Order.

Earl WINTERTON: On that point of Order. I must really ask for the protection of the Chair. Every Member of this House is entitled to raise a point of Order. My point of Order was perfectly in order, and I do not think the right hon. and gallant Gentleman has any reason to object to my intervention.

Colonel GRETTON: I submit that I have nothing to withdraw from the remarks which I ventured to make. The Noble Lord is sometimes over touchy in these matters. I do not want to delay the Committee, but I do submit that this is an important matter. The Secretary of State has told us that he has laid a paper in the library for our consideration. We have not had time to get access to that paper, have not had time to examine it—

The CHAIRMAN: The right hon. and gallant Gentleman is now going beyond the point which was urged as a reason for reporting progress.

Colonel GRETTON: Of course, I accept your ruling, but that question cannot be outside the mind of the Committee, although I may not pursue it further. I only venture to say, therefore, that I think my right hon. Friend had ample justification for the motion which he has moved, and that with due consideration of the weighty subjects which are raised
and the great responsibility of this House we should be well advised to accept that Motion.

11.51 a.m.

Major-General Sir ALFRED KNOX: There is one question I wish to put to the right hon. Gentleman the Secretary of State for India. I understood him to say, in his reply, that this document had not come before any branch of the Bengal Civil Service.

Sir S. HOARE: I do not know whether it did or did not.

Sir A. KNOX: I understood from the press that it had come before the Bengal Civil Service in India, and I cannot imagine that it was sent home without some more authority behind it than that of five civilians who, as the right hon. Gentleman said, wrote the original document. I think it must have come before someone in India before being sent home. The right hon. Gentleman made some reference to possible serious consequences that might follow its publication. I hope that does not mean that disciplinary measures are to be taken.

11.52 a. m.

Sir S. HOARE: Let me at once dispose of that question. When I said that it would have serious consequences in India I was not in any way suggesting disciplinary measures against anyone. What I did mean, and what I think, is that the publication of such views, expressed in the way in which they have been expressed, will create a great feeling of bitterness, I am afraid, against civilians in Bengal. I hope that will not be the case, but anyone who will read the expressions of opinion in this document will see how wildly, in many cases, the opinions are expressed, without any appearance of impartiality at all, and in such a way as to create the miximum of prejudice, quite undeservedly, against the Civil Service of the Province. It was on that account that I made my most serious protest against the disclosure of a document of this kind at all. My hon. and gallant Friend asked me whether the document came before the branch of the association or the association itself. I do not know whether it did. What I can say to him is that if it did come before the association it was rejected by the association.

11.54 a.m.

Brigadier-General Sir HENRY CROFT: I only wish to intervene because it appears to me, as it will appear to Members who have just come into the House, that there has been a considerable amount of confusion. Apparently, there has been some document which has come from the Bengal Association. I gather that the Secretary of State received it. Then yesterday we were informed that the official document was to be in the Library to-day. I presume I am entitled to refer to the official document without disclosing any confidence.

Sir S. HOARE: It is published here.

Sir H. CROFT: Thank you very much. I desire to point out to the Committee that, although I have not had time to see the article in the newspaper, except very cursorily, the whole of the official document which has been published and which is in the Library to-day, discloses the grave apprehension of the Civil Service in India.

The CHAIRMAN: The hon. and gallant Member must remember that I ruled just now that he must not discuss the document published in the Library, but only that on which this Motion was moved.

Sir H. CROFT: As we are about to proceed to deal with the whole of these vital questions concerning the Civil Service, is it not competent for us to discuss the official document which has now been laid before us and which deals with the very points which we are about to discuss? Would it not be advantageous to the Committee that this document should be referred to? I presume that hon. Members have not had time to read it. If hon. Members would search through that document, I would point out to them that in five minutes I have marked 10 passages which indicate immense apprehension. I submit that our whole discussion will be fruitless on the coming Clauses unless we are allowed to take cognisance of the fact that those apprehensions have been expressed in very grave language in the official document which the Secretary of State has published, and which has been assented to, so far as I can understand, by the Central Indian Civil Service Associations representing all the Provinces, and which therefore indicate the views of the Civil Service.

The CHAIRMAN: On that point of order. The hon. and gallant Member is of course entitled to refer to this document and it has indeed been referred to by most other members who have taken part in the Debate. My point is that although when a Motion to report. Progress is moved on account of the appearance of a particular document, we may discuss that particular document and also the effect which another document bearing upon the reason given for the Motion to report Progress, I do not think we may switch over with a view to considering whether we should report Progress because of some entirely different reason. That was my point. I do not want the hon. and gallant Gentleman to go into a discussion of the effect of the other document, which is not one that has come to light suddenly, because it was referred to in the Debate yesterday and is in the Library.

Sir H. CROFT: I am very grateful for your ruling, and I will not pursue the subject any further in view of what you have said other than to say that if Members of the Committee will read very carefully the document which is in the Library they will observe running all through it a note of apprehension which may be described in language different from what I understand the Secretary of State has complained of in another document, but which nevertheless bears out the statement that the whole of the Civil Service of India, contrary to what we have been told in the highest quarters, is anything but sympathetic to these reforms and is full of apprehension. When I say contrary to what we have been told in the highest quarters, I would add that I am convinced that any information which was given to this country was given innocently but that a wrong impression must have been conveyed to those in authority in this country by those in India, and we must take notice of that in dealing with these vital Clauses.

11.57 a.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: May I make a brief reference to three points in the statement made by the Secretary of State? We are glad that when he referred to possible consequences of this publication, he had not in mind penalising anyone connected with the memorandum, but I cannot help feeling that what he said about the prejudice that might.
be created is not likely to make that prejudice less. We do not want so encourage anybody to feel anything more than they might be inclined to feel. Finally, may I remind him that he does not appear to have read very carefully what appears in the "Morning Post" in regard to the approval given to this memorandum by the Bengal Indian Civil Service Association. It is clearly stated there, in black type, that the memorandum was endorsed by all but six out of 140 members of the association.

Sir S. HOARE: My information does not bear out that statement.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I will pass from that question, but there is the statement. It is in the public press and there must be some evidence behind it. Perhaps the right hon. Gentleman's information is incorrect. Anyhow, I would urge on the Committee that the main thing in any question affecting policy must be to get at the facts. As to whether anything is or is not likely to be a mare's nest is immaterial, compared with whether the policy of Parliament in matters of such tremendous importance as the future government of India and the conditions under which the Services will work, is or is not in accordance with the facts. It is above all necessary to take trouble to find out the facts when we are legislating for India. It is so difficult for any visitor to India to know what really are the conditions there, and many members who take part in the Debates must have felt the need for full and authoritative information on the matters which we have been debating. In regard to this question, more perhaps than any other that has come before us, we should spare no pains and risk any amount of ridicule from my right hon. Friend and others in order to try to arrive at the true facts.
When we consider the position of members of the Services in India, we have to recognise that they are not free to speak or to volunteer their opinion. They can only voice their opinions if they are asked officially to do so. It is a matter of great importance for us to understand whether they have been given full opportunity or not to voice their opinions on the proposals made by the Government. If hon. Members followed with any care the evidence
which was laid before the Joint Select Committee, they will have seen that representatives of the Civil Service and of the police were strictly limited in the opinions they were allowed to express. Police witnesses before the Statutory Commission were asked their opinions of the transfer of the police force. The police witnesses before the Joint Select Committee were not allowed to express an opinion on that transfer, otherwise than as to the effect it would have on their own service and its conditions. It is perfectly clear that the Joint Select Committee were not willing to invite the views of civil servants or of the associations of civil servants on questions of policy involved in the proposals.
When a document is produced by even a section of the Civil Service, and a large majority of that Service in one very important Province, which, as I believe, sets forward their views not merely in regard to their own conditions of service but on the broader issues, it seems of very great importance, and we should be failing in our duty to the country, to our Imperial interests and to the people of India if we did not do everything we could to acquaint ourselves with the truth of these matters and as to the views of the Civil Service; more especially so as two years ago we had such categorical statements from the Secretary of State for India and the Lord President of the Council that they believed that they had the great mass of the civil servants of India behind them in this matter. In order to remove any doubts as to whether civil servants have been concerned in the publication of this memorandum, I wish to say to the Committee that I am authorised to state that this publication was made without the knowledge or consent of the Bengal Civil Service Association or of its representatives over here.

Sir S. HOARE: Can my Noble Friend say how the document was obtained?

Duchess of ATHOLL: I have not the faintest idea. I am going to say this further: I am able to confirm that as long ago as January it was not the intention of those responsible for the document that it should be published. A copy of the memorandum was sent to me. When I read the memorandum, or part of it,
because it is a very long one and I had not the time to read the whole of it, I noticed that it contained some very strong expressions of opinion. It was not sent to me by anyone serving in India. When I saw that it contained very strong expressions of opinion—at least strongly expressed, because the opinions did not surprise me, as they were what I had heard before, but they were couched in very strong language—I wrote back and said "I suppose that this is not for publication," and I was assured that it was not. I therefore entirely believe that assurance given to me that this was published without the knowledge and consent of the civil servants concerned in India, or of their representatives here. I have not the faintest idea how it was published. I have not the document in my hand at the moment. My recollection is that I sent it on to someone else a month or two ago. I have been trying to find it among my papers this morning, but it is not there.

Mr. KIRKPATRICK: Would the Noble Lady refresh her memory as to whom she sent it?

Duchess of ATHOLL: I think I sent it to a. colleague when I w as in Scotland; that is my recollection; but it does not matter who he was so long as he has got it. What matters much more than the question of its publication or how it was published is whether there is any reason to believe that the views which it expresses so strongly really represent the views of any considerable body of Civil servants in India. I was not in the least surprised by what I read in it, because the views expressed confirmed what had been said to me by so many people. It is nearly three years since someone who had been serving in a very responsible position in Bengal said to me that his duties brought him into touch with practically all the Civil servants in the Province, both British and Indian, and that possibly five per cent. of them might be in favour of these proposals—that was just after the publication of the White Paper—but no more. At about the same time, an officer who had just retired from the headship of a department in another very important Province said to me that he, also, knew practically all the Civil servants in his
Province, British and Indian, as he went about a great deal and was in the habit of discussing the Government proposals drawn up by the Round Table Conferences; and that, with regard in particular to the transfer of law and order, he could not remember a single Civil servant, British or Indian, who did not think that that would be madness. But they were not free to express their opinions, and they had not been invited to do so.
Therefore, I submit that a question of very great importance has been raised by my right hon. Friend. I admit at once that there are phrases in this memorandum which are not suitable for publication; I said so in my first few sentences. But do not let us blind ourselves to the necessity of trying to get at the facts, and, in particular, of trying to get the views of the only men who really know this question; and the only men who really know it are the men who have spent long years of service in India, and who, from their knowledge of that country, its people, languages and customs, are really able to say how these proposals are going to work. I feel that I must say again what I ventured to say before-that I think all these debates have been conducted in an atmosphere of unreality, of failure to realise how enormously the conditions in India differ from those in this country. I therefore beg the Committee to take the trouble to acquaint itself more fully with the views of the Civil servants as expressed in this memorandum, in the memorial published yesterday, and in other ways, before proceeding with the discussion of these very important problems.

12.10 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: It seems to me that two matters arise in this discussion—first, the attitude of the Civil servants in India with respect to their personal and private interests; and, secondly, the attitude of the Civil servants with regard to policy. It seems to me that no one in any quarter of the House would question or cavil at the exercise by the Civil servants of their right to examine how these proposals will affect their private interests, and I, for one, am prepared to receive any information that may be available as to how the Civil servants in India regard these proposals from the standpoint of
the effect upon their private financial and other interests. I think that so far we are all agreed. But, with regard to the larger issue that emerges in this discussion, I think it is time that a question should be raised. What is the point of all this discussion? Is it claimed that, because the Civil servants in India differ from the policy embarked upon by the Government, this Bill, therefore, is to be held up, whether the Bill be good or bad? This is a fairly important question—

Mr. CHURCHILL: The whole point is that it has been claimed that the Civil servants were overwhelmingly in favour of the Government's policy. That has been repeatedly claimed, and it is because of the evidence that there is to the contrary that we have raised this question.

Mr. JONES: I can understand the point that the right hon. Gentleman makes, but it seems to me to be an argument in favour of rejecting the Bill on Third Reading rather than of moving to report Progress at this particular stage. The only case for reporting Progress here and now must surely be on the first issue, namely, as to how these proposals affect the personal interests of the Civil servants. If that issue were raised in this document, and that issue only, I could understand a Motion to report Progress, but on the larger issue, I think it is childish. The question is a fundamental one. Is it going to be argued in this Committee that, whenever a Bill is propounded in the House of Commons, the Civil servants of the country are to be asked their opinion; and, if they disagree, is the Bill to be held up? That seems to me to be the whole argument. The right hon. Gentleman, at one part of his speech, seemed to imply that, because the Civil servants were reacting unfavourably to the policy involved in the Bill, therefore we were to hold up the progress of the Bill. I am prepared to grant to the Civil servants, as I am to other subjects, the right to express their views upon any matter of public policy, but I deny absolutely the claim that the Civil servants in India should be able to say, because they disagree with the proposals of the Bill, that therefore the Bill must be held up. I reject absolutely any such claim, and I believe that the House must put its foot down firmly upon
a proposition such as that. We are the people to determine what is to be passed by the House and what is not to be passed by the House. As the right hon. Gentleman knows, I take violent objection to many parts of the Bill, but on this matter I must be firm with my colleagues in the House. We must not allow Civil servants in any part of the country to dictate to us what should be the policy followed by the House of Commons.

12.14 p.m.

Captain CAZALET: The Noble Lady the Member for West Perth (Duchess of Atholl) said it was very necessary for every Member of the House to try to inform himself as to the real truth and as to the views of people in India, particularly of Members of the Civil Service. I have been either in correspondence or in conversation during the last few months with a retired judge from Bengal and a retired police officer who has 20 years' experience in another part of India, and they hold views diametrically opposite to those of the Noble Lady. I shall be very glad to put her in touch with them if she would like to find out what their views are. It has been the habit lately in the House rather to ridicule anyone who attempted to inform himself on this subject by actually going out to India and asking the people their views on the spot. It was always assumed that anyone who did that would be immediately "nobbled" by those who live on Olympian heights, and that his views would therefore be framed entirely upon what he heard in such quarters—

Duchess of ATHOLL: May I remind my hon. and gallant Friend of what I said on the Second Reading? I said that the civil servants were not allowed to express their opinions, and that I had been informed that they were particularly shy of talking to Members of Parliament who went out there. The document confirms exactly what I said on Second Reading.

Captain CAZALET: Not only did I meet those dwelling on Olympian heights in India, but members of all Services, old and young, sonic in high positions and some who had just gone out there, some who were about to retire, others who had retired. I can quite understand that if Members of Parliament of the distinction of my hon. and gallant
Friend the Member for Wycombe (Sir A. Knox), or, indeed, the noble lady herself, went out to India, some of these civil servants might be slightly frightened about expressing their true views to such important people, but I cannot flatter myself that they would consider my influence, either here or anywhere else, of such weight and importance that they would not speak their minds frankly 'and openly to me. I think it is a reflection on the intelligence of members of the Civil Service in India to suggest such a deplorable lack of courage in private conversation with people they have known all their lives, that they are frightened of expressing their own views on a question of this kind. I ask why those who took the same opportunity as I did to go to India did not hear on all sides these views which we are told exist among civil servants in India to-day, these grave anxieties and this consideration not only about the future of India but about their own interests as well. We did not hear them because they did not exist.

Sir H. CROFT: The hon. and gallant Member does not deny, I presume, the authenticity of the document where there are the very words he has been using, and which are the unanimous opinion of those representatives of the whole Indian Civil Service?

Captain CAZALET: I will not deny that it is quite possible to find to-day members of the Civil Service in India who are anxious about the future of India. Who is not anxious about the future of India? I perfectly appreciate that they have every right to, and indeed should, represent their views to the Secretary of State and anyone else. It is only in justice to themselves, and, indeed, it is really commonsense that they should examine with the greatest possible care what the conditions are going to be, and that they should express their anxiety through the proper channels. Of course, these officials have expressed their anxiety, but, on the whole, I found that they had complete confidence in the Secretary of State to look after the interests of the Service, and to safeguard their conditions in the future; and, as regards general policy, it is almost universally known that the Government's proposals were the best possible solution for a highly complex problem.

12.19 p.m.

Mr. GODFREY NICHOLSON: I want, first of all, to record my profound disagreement with the opinions expressed by the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Mr. Morgan Jones). I do not think that many Members of this House have anything like the knowledge of India that they have of this country, and, therefore, to draw any parallel between the weight which should be attached to the opinions of the Civil Service in India and the weight which should be attached to the opinions of the Civil Service in England, seems to me ridiculous. I am absolutely at one with the Noble Lady. If I thought for a moment that a majority, or even a respectable proportion of the Civil Service in India was profoundly at variance with the policy of His Majesty's Government, I should be in the same Lobby as the Noble Lady every time. As my hon. and gallant Friend the Member for Chippenham (Captain Cazalet) said, it is becoming the fashion on that side of the House to sneer at hon. Members who have tried to find out the facts on the spot. Again I am entirely at one with the Noble Lady. I think that the facts are the only things that matter, and that it is very regrettable if ever there has been a factious opposition or factious support of the Government. Very humbly, I want to put before the Committee what were the impressions left on my mind after three short months in India. I do ask the House to believe that I went there with an open mind, and with an honest wish to find out the truth.

Sir H. CROFT rose—

Mr. NICHOLSON: Perhaps my hon. and gallant Friend will allow me to continue. As a matter of honest fact, I must confess I should rather have liked to have come back a die-hard. In common with most Englishmen, I rather like being in a minority. I found, however, that there was just as great variety of opinion among Englishmen in India on the subject of reforms as there is in England-exactly the same variety. There were people who, without thinking much about the matter, said that it was all very lovely. There were people who were in favour of the reforms. There were people who did not think much either way. There were die-hards quite as much in India as in England. There were people
who loath politicians and suspect everything that comes from Westminster or Whitehall. But the difference was this. The people in India were, and are, face to face with the situation as it actually exists, and they have got to face the future and carry on the burden and responsibility of the administration and government of India in the future. I ask the Committee to believe one more thing, namely, that I did not by any means confine myself to what my hon. and gallant Friend called the Olympians. There were many people in the Civil Service and elsewhere who had been at Oxford and school with me. There were people in the country as well as in the towns, administrators in the districts as well as administrators in the secretariat. The question I put to them was not so much "Do you think the Government's policy is the right and wise policy for the future development of India?"—

Sir FRANK SANDERSON: On a point of Order. Is my hon. Friend in order in making a Second Reading speech on this Motion?

The CHAIRMAN: I would not describe it as a Second Reading speech, but I was awaiting the opportunity of asking the hon. Member to relate what he is saying to the Motion immediately before the Committee, and the question whether we should adjourn as the result of the production of this particular document. We must not allow the Debate to develop on the general lines suggested by the hon. Member's remarks.

Mr. NICHOLSON: I must apologise if I have strayed too far, but it is a difficult subject to confine within narrow limits. I was trying to relate my remarks on the basis of the opinion of serving officers in India with special reference to the document referred to this morning. I was saying that if one asks civil servants in India their opinion as to the general trend of policy, you get a wide variety of answers. The question I asked was always, "If you were a Member of Parliament in my place, would you support or oppose the Government policy?" That, after all, is the question that every hon. Member has to ask himself—shall it be the aye lobby or the no lobby? The answer I got in every case, except one, from members of the Civil Services and other Services, was this.

The CHAIRMAN: The hon. Member has not satisfied me that he is relating this subject to the immediate Debate.

Mr. NICHOLSON: I am very sorry. I did not mean to transgress, but surely the question before the Committee is whether we shall adjourn because the general feeling of the Civil Service in India is that these proposals are disastrous.

The CHAIRMAN: No, I think the hon. Member is quite wrong. It is a question whether we should report Progress on account of the appearance of a particular document to which reference has been made. Up to a point no doubt it is quite legitimate to discuss how far that may be regarded as the opinion of an important or unimportant or a large or small body of persons.

Mr. NICHOLSON: That was what I was trying to do. I was speaking of my own experience in the last few months. I will, however, try to keep within your ruling, but I find myself in great difficulty. From the answers I have received from the very men who are alleged to be represented in this document, as I have said, a certain school of thought think that the Government are on the right lines, that it is in the true English and historic tradition, and that it is normal development. What is far more interesting to me is the point of view of what I call, without meaning to be rude, the diehard mentality in India. They all said, with one exception, that, having got so far you have got to go through with it. "Having taken these steps you will land us into the most frightful difficulties and dangers in India if you subsequently reject the reforms." Steps were taken long ago, certainly before I had anything to do with politics, which have made the present policy of the Government the only policy that can possibly be adopted. I am convinced that if the noble Lady—I refer to her because no one in the Committee can doubt her burning sincerity on this question, and this is my honest and sincere opinion—had taken the trouble or had been able to spare the time to reinforce her vast erudition on this subject by an actual visit to India and an honest inquiry among civil servants in India she would have come back, however reluctantly, with the same views as those which I hold. That is my honest con-
viction. Hon. Members who vote against the Government on this policy may, perhaps rightly, sneer at people with a very slight knowledge of India, but I think we on this side of the Committee are equally entitled to question the validity of the opinions of people who have never been to India in their lives.

12.28 p.m.

Mr. ANNESLEY SOMERVILLE: There is an atmosphere of unreality about this discussion. We supposed to be discussing the reason why we should report progress because of the paper before us, but what is really underlying the discussion is: What is the opinion of the Indian Civil Service with regard to the Bill? and it is not possible to develop this question fully according to your ruling, Sir Dennis Herbert. My hon. and gallant Friend the Member for Chippenham (Captain Cazalet) and my hon. Friend the Member for Morpeth (Mr. G. Nicholson) have given very fully the results of their visits to India and the opinion that they heard expressed by member of the Civil Service, and I take it that I am free, at any rate, to refer to the three sources of knowledge that we have here with regard to the feelings of the Civil Service in India with regard to this Bill. We have the evidence that was given before the Joint Select Committee, and, when you read between the lines of that evidence, it is impossible to avoid the conviction that the Civil Service of India is greatly disquieted with regard to the Government of India Bill. We have the Memorial which was presented to the Secretary of State a few days ago, and now we have the document which we are at present discussing, and which appeared in one of the morning papers, the authenticity of which we have no reason to doubt, but which has been described by my right hon. Friend the Member for Sparkbrook (Mr. Amery) as a mare's nest.

Mr. AMERY: No, not the document but the revelation of my right hon. Friend.

Mr. SOMERVILLE: Yes, the revelation of the document quoted by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) as a mare's nest; and he recalled, as an instance of the propensity of the right hon. Gentleman to discover mares' nests, the matter which was referred to a Committee of Privileges. With
regard to that, we were told that, while the White Paper was being considered by the Joint Select Committee, it was sub judice, but in order to arrive at the decisions they arrived at, the Committee of Privileges had to declare that the Joint Select Committee was not a judicial committee; and there is now a committee sitting to disentangle the matter. The impression one gets on reading the document to which reference has been made this morning is that it was drawn up by men who were really anxious and disquieted and who made notes which were not intended for publication, but which found their way into the public press. Those notes were the foundation of the memorial which was presented to the Secretary of State. The impression which is left on my mind by the whole of the evidence and the literature with regard to the Indian Civil Service is that it is profoundly disquieted. Its attitude towards the Bill is of very great importance. We are realists, or ought to be realists in this matter. We ought to judge this matter on facts, and the opinion of the Indian Civil Service is of vast importance. We have to realise in our discussions that that feeling of disquiet and anxiety exists and that it is grave and deep, and the Government would do well to take full and grave note of it.

12.33 p.m.

Wing-Commander JAMES: I want briefly to make an appeal to the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill). When he gets hold of what may possibly be a perfectly legitimate Committee point he always renders a dispassionate examination of that point perfectly impossible by mixing it up with his general feeling against the Bill. The right hon. Gentleman appears to me to be carrying out two separate functions, both perfectly legitimate. First to offer general opposition to the provisions of the Bill in which he performs, in some respects, a very useful role, and secondly, his object is to improve the details of the Bill. But it seems to me that he invariably vitiates and spoils his second objective by mixing it up with the first. Take the actual issue which we are discussing now. In support of the Motion to report Progress he must of necessity, as did the hon. and gallant Member for Bournemouth (Sir H. Croft), drag in general considerations merely for the purpose of creating prejudice and not having
any possible relation to the subject under discussion. I will give an example. He said that this shows that the Civil Service as a whole—I am paraphrasing his words—has exactly the same rooted objections to the principles of this Bill as have the Princes. The first is a matter of opinion and the second statement has been disproved.

Mr. CHURCHILL: No.

Wing-Commander JAMES: As a general principle.

Mr. CHURCHILL: No.

Wing-Commander JAMES: At least that is arguable. If the right hon. Gentleman really wants to improve the Bill and not to stultify himself in that respect and not to do an injustice to himself or those whose cause he takes up he should not overstate cases which however important in themselves are nothing more than Committee points.

12.36 p.m.

Sir REGINALD CRADDOCK: As an old member of the Indian Civil Service I should like to make a few observations. I received the document which has been published in the "Morning Post." I received it somewhere about the middle of January, and I think I received it from the Noble Lady the Member for Perthshire West (Duchess of Atholl). That document is still reposing in a drawer somewhere, and I have taken no action upon it except to ask certain persons who represent the Civil Service what those who had written the note expected one to do. Of course, it was strictly confidential, and it was certainly not likely that I should want to give them away, because it reached me from a source of which they would probably know nothing. I read the memorandum and there were passages in it which were somewhat amusing. It was obviously not a document which could be sent on as a memorial, because it would be thrown out at the very first reading on the ground of being couched in very disrespectful language. That would have been its fate immediately. It was impossible as a memorial itself and I asked those who represented the Service to ascertain whether the Association was preparing a memorial which could be submitted in the ordinary way to the Secretary of State through the Governor or the
Governor-General. I received information that they were preparing such a memorandum.
What I read into the communication, which was expressed in bitter language, was that it was the real opinion of those who had read it that they would under the new regime be the toad beneath the harrow. It is no use our being the butterfly on the wheel and preaching contentment to the toad beneath the harrow. It has been borne in upon me from letters I have received from relatives of people who are serving in India, sometimes from parents and wives that they make it clear that there is a great dread over the whole of India about speaking one's opinion freely. That dread is not so much a dread of the powers that be now but a dread, as the time draws near for this Bill and Constitution to come into operation, of what they say being repeated to anyone else, and their name transpiring. They have a dread of how they will be treated by the powers that will be when the Act comes into operation.

Mr. G. NICHOLSON: Does the hon. Member really say that men in the Services who were at Oxford or at school with me, were afraid to tell me—a not very important, alarming or impressive person—their true opinions?

Sir R. CRADDOCK: I do not know what confidences were expressed to my hon. Friend. I am only judging from the evidence of people who write home and from communications that are sent to me, and I only know that great apprehensions are expressed lest it should be known that they have communicated certain sentiments and that their names should be known. As regards what my hon. Friend the Member for Morpeth (Mr. G. Nicholson) has been saying, I know very well that there are a lot of people who say: "We are now so committed by the statements that have been made by high authorities in India and high authorities at home that for good or ill you had better go on with it." But there is no enthusiasm about it. That is all that I desire to say at the moment.

12.41 p.m.

Mr. EDWARD WILLIAMS: I have not had the privilege, like some hon. Members, of having been to India, but I have with other hon. Members a great regard
for the Civil Service of this country and the Civil Service in India. It is very difficult for me in listening to the Debate to assess whether the Civil Service in India in general or a few members of it in particular are satisfied with the present Bill. I have to accept the statement made by the Secretary of State, who is in a position to obtain more authentic information than anyone else. I perceive in this Debate an important matter of principle. I wonder whether the right hon. Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) if a Bill came before this House that concerned a distinct section of the community of this country, for instance, the miners, would be prepared to consider the opinion of miners as having as much to do with the subject as he is prepared to give to the Civil Servants in India, in view of the document that has been published in a newspaper? Does he think that Parliament has to consider the weight of opinion of a given section of the community to such an extent as to justify the withdrawal of a Bill?

Mr. CHURCHILL: A Motion to report Progress is not a Motion to withdraw a Bill. It is a Motion to delay the proceedings while further consideration is given to some aspect of the matter. I am quite in favour of consulting the miners on a matter connected with the mining industry.

Mr. WILLIAMS: When the right hon. Gentleman was speaking he certainly did use the phrase that if the publication of this particular document was authentic and that it was the considered opinion of the majority of the Civil servants in India that that in itself was a justification for the withdrawal of the Bill. I feel certain that on reflection he would not take up that attitude. A Bill once presented to Parliament should not be withdrawn if one section of the community expresses an opinion antagonistic to its contents, otherwise Parliament will merely express the opinion of a given section of the community. The Cabinet, the Executive would have no authentic powers. It would at all times have to submerge itself to sectional opinion. I protest against that. It would seem to me from the attitude of the right hon. Gentleman on the last occasion when he moved to report Progress, and on this occasion that he is acting as a very good
advertising agent for the "Morning Post." Whenever the "Morning Post" can find something which seems to be alarming in order to increase its circulation the right hon. Gentleman comes down to the House, makes a forensic speech full of logic, a speech which of course we all enjoy, but which, nevertheless, is still the "Morning Post." The sum and substance of the Debate is that something has been published in the "Morning Post," not in the public Press— the public is not seized of the knowledge in the "Morning Post"—and I think it is really high time that the "Morning Post" should seek some other publicity agent rather than the right hon. Gentleman.

Mr. CHURCHILL: I must take exception to the closing words of the hon. Member. I am not in any way connected with the "Morning Post," and I do not think that the hon. Member meant to suggest that I have any connection with the paper or any connection which should stand between me and the discharge of my Parliamentary duties. I hope he will make that clear.

Mr. WILLIAMS: I do not suggest that the right hon. Gentleman has any personal connection with the "Morning Post", but he is giving them good publicity.

12.47 p.m.

Lord APSLEY: I am sure that the right hon. Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) has no personal connection with "Morning Post," except during the time of the general strike when he brought up its circulation to over the million mark at the expenditure of a certain amount of money. I have not had an opportunity of studying this portentous document until I came to the House but, having got a copy and having listened to the Secretary of State's speech, I confess that I find it rather difficult to reconcile the statement in the document and the right hon. Gentleman's speech. The Secretary of State gave us the impression that the document was the work of four or five individuals and had not obtained the assent of any Civil Service association, indeed that it had been rejected. In the introduction to the document it says that the note was prepared by the Bengal
Civil Service Association, was unanimously accepted by the committee of the association and was subsequently endorsed by all but six of the 140 members of the Bengal Civil Service Association. It also says that it was then sent to other associations who, I gather, objected to the form in which it was drafted, it was not quite in Parliamentary form, and that from the note they compiled the memorandum which is now in the Secretary of State's hands. That is altogether a different thing from a note compiled by a few individuals which has no backing at all, and I think the Committee should be informed of the real situation in regard to this document. Either the Committee is being misinformed by the "Morning Post," or else has been misinformed by the Secretary of State, and I hope that the right hon. Gentleman will be able to clear up the matter when he replies, otherwise the Committee will have good reason for accepting the motion to report Progress. We shall not be able to carry on with the subsequent clauses of the Bill unless we know the real weight of opinion behind this note amongst the civil servants in
India.

2.48 p.m.

Mr. RAIKES: I should like to reinforce the remarks of the noble lord the Member for Bristol Central (Lord Apsley). Early in the debate the Secretary of State was asked by the hon. and gallant Member for Wycombe (Sir A. Knox) whether the Bengal Civil Service had been approached in regard to this document. His answer was that he did not know whether the document had been circulated to the Bengal Civil Service representatives or not, but that if it had been it must certainly have been rejected by them. That seems to me to be a very curious answer. After all, the right hon. Gentleman does not know whether the members of the Civil Service in Bengal have been circularised and it is therefore impossible for him to say that they have rejected it. From what appears in the "Morning Post" to-day it is obvious that a document of this character must have been circulated to a considerable number of people otherwise there would be no object in the document being produced. If it has been circulated amongst the Bengal Civil Service and they have not complained
against it to the representatives of the Secretary of State, then it would appear, on the face of it, that it is more than likely that the "Morning Post" is correct and that the document was accepted by a very large number of the people among whom it was circulated. That is a point which I think the Committee has a right to ask should be considered more closely. If it is true that a large number of Civil. Servants in Bengal and elsewhere are in favour of the proposals in this document it will make a material difference to the position as it affects the Bill. We think that the position should be further considered and that the Secretary of State ought to be in a position at a later date to tell us whether the document does represent the serving interests in Bengal or not.
The whole matter has arisen largely on account of what was said by the Lord President of the Council that practically the whole of the Civil Service in India were behind the Bill. That had a tremendous effect upon the Committee. If the Lord President of the Council was misinformed, if it is true that there is a large section in Bengal who are bitterly opposed to many of its provisions, it is manifestly absurd to go forward dealing with Amendment after Amendment connected with clauses affecting the civil service to which they object, that is, if this document truly reflects their opinions. It is all very well for the hon. Member for Morpeth (Mr. G. Nicholson) and the hon. and gallant Member for Chippenham (Captain Cazelet) to tell us about their personal experiences in India. They may have been interesting but we are dealing with questions which will affect the whole of the Bengal Civil Service-not a few vague members who may have been interviewed by a few Members of Parliament. The hon. Member for Morpeth said that he went out there with an open mind. He may have done so, but it is rather curious that he was the sole 'supporter of the original White Paper at the Conservative Party conference which was held a few months before he went to India.

Mr. NICHOLSON: The hon. Member himself is now vague. What he must be referring to is the Conservative Party Conference at Blackpool in 1932. I do not quite remember whether I moved or.
seconded a resolution, but this is what I said, and I stand by it still. I said that a Conservative Party conference was not a competent body to decide on the future of India. I said that it was the policy of the Government whether we liked it or not, of the India Office, of the Central Government and of each Provincial Government, and that as I read history it was the logical course, that, in fact, we were committed to a certain line of policy by people who knew all about India.

Sir H. CROFT: Did not the hon. Member support the policy of the Government?

Mr. NICHOLSON: If the hon. and gallant Member for Bournemouth (Sir H. Croft) is suggesting that I am telling an untruth when I said that I went to India with a mind completely free to consider all the evidence, I could discover for myself and with an honest intention to make up my mind on that evidence—if he is saying I am a liar—

Sir H. CROFT: I would never say such a thing about the hon. Member. I must say that he clearly at that conference espoused the Government policy. He moved the Amendment and therefore, if his mind was open when he went to India, it must be very muddled now.

The CHAIRMAN: Personal references to hon. Members cannot possibly be avoided in a debate of this kind and when they are made the hon. Member referred to has a perfect right to answer. I must ask the Committee, however, not to branch off from the debate into a debate on the conduct of one or more hon. Members.

Mr. NICHOLSON: The hon. and gallant Member for Bournemouth would, I am sure, never even imply that anyone was telling an untruth, but he is in fact implying that because I told a Conservative party conference that they had no option but to back up their own leaders I am incapable of honestly considering evidence which I found out for myself in India. I protest very strongly against this insinuation.

Mr. RAIKES: I do not wish to pursue the matter further. The hon. Member for Morpeth has given his idea of what he considers an open mind. Whether
anybody else would consider their minds open in like circumstances I do not know. I leave it at that. I should like to make a protest against the way in which certain hon. Members have accused my right hon. Friend of introducing prejudice by raising this Motion to report Progress. There is no question of prejudice at all. It is our duty. New facts have come out; possible facts have appeared this morning. My right hon. Friend called attention to them and those who want to avoid these new facts are themselves blinded by prejudice and are not prepared to face the issue which we have to face at the present time. I do ask the Secretary of State once more to consider whether it is not in the interests of the Government and of the Committee that the question of this new document should be more closely considered to discover whether it does represent the full force of the Civil Service of Bengal and whether it would not be advisable in the interests of the Government that they should hold up proceedings until they know whether the Civil Service have passed it in this form or not.

12.59 p.m.

Mr. CHURCHILL: We have had no answer from the Secretary of State to the question which was addressed very directly to him by the Noble Lord. It is quite true, so far as I am concerned, that the expression "covering letter" was not an accurate description. In defence of that, I must point out that I passed the greater part of the morning reading the publication and that I have had very little time since it appeared—I never knew about the matter until this morning—to couch the actual statement in the appropriate terms. But if I say that expression was incorrect, I do less than justice to the actual fact, because as the Noble Lord has pointed out it is definitely stated here, on the authority of this particular newspaper, that this document was approved unanimously by the committee of the Bengal Civil Service Association and that it was subsequently endorsed' by the 140 members of the Association. The Secretary of State made no answer to that, except that in an earlier statement he said that it was not accurate. We ought to know whether it is accurate or not and whether he gets proper information on the matter, because it makes art enormous difference if it is only two or three people, and the moment the.
Association saw it they objected. That is the impression he gave. We ought to know quite definitely whether these statements are correct or not. If he says he is not properly informed on the matter, will he make the further inquiries that are necessary? Here are quite definite statements which are based upon authentic information. I never heard about this matter until to-day. It appears that some of my colleagues heard about this document a long time ago and the Secretary of State apparently knew of it days ago. Here is a definite statement. The Secretary of State ought to say where he now stands in the matter, and I do not think we ought to come to a division without an answer.

1.1 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: I have very little to add to what I said at the beginning of the debate, but perhaps I can repeat it with greater detail. My information is that this was one of, I think, several drafts made in the early stages of discussions about the Bill by members of the Bengal branch, that it was sent round to members of the branch and my information goes to show that it was not accepted, as the noble lord stated, by all but six members of the branch. My information goes to show that it was not accepted, and I am definitely authorised by the Governor of Bengal to say that the memorandum that I have laid in the Library of the House is the only authoritative and representative document. I think that is sufficient and that the Committee will say that this is the only authoritative and representative document before them. My right hon. Friend says "Not at all". Does he mean to suggest that we ought to take into account every draft that was made, every stage in the preparation of a document of this kind, and that we ought to ignore the authorised document approved by the branch itself, and supported by the Central Association? If he takes that view, I entirely disagree with him. I say to the Committee that the only document before them is the document a copy of which is in the Library of the House, a document, as the Committee will see, that raises no question of general policy, but, with the exception of one allusion to terrorism to which I referred yesterday in the House, deals as it should, with Service points-Service points that have
already been before the Joint Select Committee and the India Office and in regard to every one of which there is an Amendment upon the Order Paper, showing that we are going to discuss all these Service points and give them our full attention and sympathetic treatment. I myself have put down more than one Amendment dealing with them, and the Committee can rest assured that there is not a single one that will be ignored in our discussion. That being so, I suggest that much the best course for the Committee is to return to the discussion of these Service points, to take only into account the official document of the branches of the Civil Service Associations and to ignore these disclosures, whatever they may be worth of from whatever source they may have come, only expressing our regret that action should have been taken which I am quite sure is undeservedly going to prejudice the Service in Bengal.

1.5 p.m.

Mr. CHURCHILL: I am sure that my right hon. Friend has given the House the full information in his possession, but there is a perfectly clear and plain conflict of testimony as to the amount of support that this document, which has been disclosed, enjoys amongst the Civil Servants of Bengal, and as to how much it represents their opinion. My right hon. Friend must not suggest that I have said that we should ignore the official memorial. Certainly not. We should take that into consideration too. But in reading that memorial we should also be guided by the extremely valuable light that is thrown upon it by this document. There is a clear conflict of testimony. The right hon. Gentleman has given his side of the question, but there is the other side also. Personally, without in the slightest degree throwing any aspersions on the right hon. Gentleman's bona fides, that he gave his information upon the facts presented to him, I still feel that there is a great body of Indian Civil service opinion behind the doubts and anxieties expressed in this document, and that it is a new fact which is brought to our notice, showing what is going on behind the scenes in the service in a way that a formal document would never have done; and this new fact fully justifies us in asking that the Chairman should report Progress in order that the whole position.
may be reviewed upon these Civil service clauses. I am therefore not able to withdraw my Motion.

1.8 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I am in possession of some additional information bearing on the question whether this memorandum represents the views of the members of the Bengal Civil Service Association.

Sir S. HOARE: What is the source of it?

Duchess of ATHOLL: The source of it is one that is extremely well-informed. I will give the facts and the Committee can judge for themselves. I understand that the memorandum was circulated to all members of the Bengal Civil Service Association with an intimation that if it represented their views it was not necessary for them to write and say so. Replies were not received from the great majority. There were a few both of dissent and of approval. The paper was sent out with a clear intimation that if it was approved it was not necessary for members to write and say so, but an answer was requested if a member wished to express dissent. As I say, there were extremely few replies in dissent, and therefore the presumption is that the members who received this document, being intelligent men and experienced men, fully capable of understanding it, approved of the document. They were in the vast majority.

1.9 p.m.

Mr. TINKER: I look upon this debate as a travesty of Parliamentary government. We have had the Barebones Parliament, the Long Parliament, and other Parliaments. This Parliament will be known as the Churchill Parliament. It is about time we made some protest against the waste of time that is caused by raising points of order or moving to report progress on practically every day of the week. What is going to happen later on when some of us attempt to

Division No. 144.]
AYES.
[1.12 p.m.


Acland-Troyte, Lieut.-Colonel
Craddock, Sir Reginald Henry
Hartington, Marquess of


Applin, Lieut.-Col. Reginald V. K.
Croft, Brigadier-General Sir H.
Hunter, Capt. M. J. (Brigg)


Atholl, Duchess of
Donner, P. w
Keyes, Admiral Sir Roger


Broadbent, Colonel John
Emmott, Charles E. G. C.
Knox, Sir Alfred


Burnett, John George
Erskine-Bolst, Capt. C. C. (Blackpool)
McConnell, Sir Joseph


Churchill, Rt. Hon. Winston Spencer
Everard, W. Lindsay
Reid, David D.(County Down)


Cobb, Sir Cyril
Goodman, Colonel Albert W.
Remer, John R.


Courtauld, Major John Sewell
Gretton, Colonel Rt. Hon. John
Sanderson, Sir Frank Barnard

raise points of order on questions of this kind. We shall not be treated as the right hon. Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) has been treated.

The CHAIRMAN: The hon. Member has not quite realised what he has said. He is on very dangerous ground.

Mr. TINKER: I raise my protest. I have sat here all this morning and most of the time during these debates, and whether I am right or wrong I am voicing my own personal view. It is a sheer waste of time by the right hon. Member for Epping (Mr. Churchill) and the Government ought to show more courage in the matter. If they want to get the Bill through let them tell him what they intend to do, and fight him.

1.11 p.m.

Mr. CHURCHILL: Really this is a most unprovoked attack. I am exercising parliamentary liberties which are of value to minorities and which I hope will be preserved to other Parliaments besides this. The procedure which we have adopted is going forward in the regular manner. The debate this morning has acquired a great deal of interest. Many Members have taken part in it. Matters of this kind should not be ruled out in a sort of Cromwellian way. "Take away that bauble" and that kind of spirit are more suited to the worst dictatorship in Europe than to a free debating assembly. I hope that the leaders of the Opposition will pass a little more education in parliamentary procedure to their unruly and intemperate and arrogant follower on the back bench. At any rate, as long as we have rights and liberties in this House we shall certainly use them as we think fit and in the way best calculated to bring out the real issues which govern the legislation under consideration.

Question put, "That the Chairman do report Progress, and ask leave to sit again."

The Committee divided: Ayes, 32; Noes, 181.

Smiles, Lieut.-Col. Sir Walter D.
Touche, Gordon Cosmo



Somerville, Annesley A. (Windsor)
Wayland, Sir William A.
TELLERS FOR THE AYES.—


Taylor, Vice-Admiral E. A. (P'dd'gt'n, S.)
Williams, Herbert G. (Croydon, S.)
Mr. Lennox-Boyd and Mr. Ralkes.


Thorp, Linton Theodore
Wise, Alfred R.





NOES.


Adams, Samuel Vyvyan T. (Leeds, W.)
George, Major G. Lloyd(Pembroke)
Petherick, M.


Addison, Rt. Hon. Dr. Christopher
Gilmour, Lt.-Col. Rt. Hon. Sir John
Pickthorn, K. W. M.


Agnew, Lieut.-Com. P. G.
Glossop, C. W. H.
Potter, John


Allen, William (Stoke-on-Trent)
Gluckstein, Louis Halle
Powell, Lieut.-Col. Evelyn G. H.


Amery, Rt. Hon. Leopold C. M. S.
Grattan-Doyle, Sir Nicholas
Power, Sir John Cecil


Apsley, Lord
Greenwood, Rt. Hon. Arthur
Pownall, Sir Assheton


Baillie, Sir Adrian W. M.
Griffith, F. Kingsley (Middlesbro'.W.)
Pybus, Sir John


Baldwin, Rt. Hon. Stanley
Grimston, R. V.
Radford, E. A.


Balfour, Capt. Harold (I. of Thanet)
Groves, Thomas E.
Ramsay, T. B. W. (Western Isles)


Banfield, John William
Grundy, Thomas W.
Ratcliffe, Arthur


Batey, Joseph
Guinness, Thomas L. E. B.
Rathbone, Eleanor


Blinded, James
Gunston, Captain D. W.
Reed, Arthur C. (Exeter)


Bossom, A.C.
Hacking, Rt. Hon. Douglas H.
Reid, James S. C. (Stirling)


Bowyer, Capt. Sir George E. W.
Hamilton, Sir R.W.(Orkney & Zetl'nd)
Reid, William Allan (Derby)


Brass, Captain Sir William
Harvey, Major Sir Samuel (Totnes)
Rhys, Hon. Charles Arthur U.


Briscoe, Capt. Richard George
Haslam, Henry (Horncastle)
Ropner, Colonel L.


Brown, Ernest (Leith)
Helloers, Captain F. F. A.
Ross, Ronald D.


Buchan-Hepburn, P. G. T.
Herbert, Major J. A. (Monmouth)
Ross Taylor, Walter (Woodbridge)


Bullock, Captain Malcolm
Hoare, Lt.-Col. Rt. Hon. Sir S. J. G.
Russell, Alexander West (Tynemouth)


Butler, Richard Austen
Hope, Capt. Hon. A.O. J. (Aston)
Russell, R. J. (Eddisbury)


Cadogan, Hon. Edward
Howitt, Dr. Alfred B.
Rutherford, Sir John Hugo (Liverp'l)


Campbell, Vice-Admiral G. (Burnley)
Hudson, Capt. A. U. M. (Hackney, N.)
Samuel, M. R. A. (W'ds'wth, Putney).


Campbell-Johnston, Malcolm
Hume, Sir George Hopwood
Sandys, Duncan


Caporn, Arthur Cecil
Jackson, Sir Henry (Wandsworth, C.)
Selley, Harry R. 


Cautley, Sir Henry S.
James, Wing-Com. A. W. H.
Smithers, Sir Waldron


Cayazer, Sir Charles (Chester, City)
Joel, Dudley J. Barnato
Somervell, Sir Donald


Cazalet, Capt. V. A. (Chippenham)
John, William
Sotheron-Estcourt, Captain T. E.


Chapman, Col. R. (Houghton-le-Spring)
Johnston, J. W. (Clackmannan)
Spencer, Captain Richard A.


Clarke, Frank
Jones, Morgan (Caerphilly)
Stanley, Rt. Hon. Lord (Fylde)


Clarry, Reginald George
Ker, J. Campbell
Stanley, Rt. Hon. Oliver (W'morland)


Clayton, Sir Christopher
Kirkpatrick, William M.
Stourton, Hon. John J.


Cochrane, Commander Hon. A. D.
Lamb, Sir Joseph Quinton
Strauss, Edward A.


Cocks, Frederick Seymour
Law, Sir Alfred
Strickland, Captain W. F.


Cooke, Douglas
Leckie, J. A.
Sutcliffe, Harold


Copeland, Ida
Lewis, Oswald
Thomas, Rt. Hon. J. H. (Derby)


Courthope, Colonel Sir George L.
Lindsay, Noel Ker
Thorne, William James


Crookshank, Col. C. de Windt (Bootle)
Lister, Rt. Hon. Sir Philip Cunliffe-
Tinker, John Joseph


Crookshank, Capt. H. C. (Gainsb'ro)
Lloyd, Geoffrey
Tree, Ronald


Daggar, George
Loftus, Pierce C.
Tufnell, Lieut.-Commander R. L.


Dalkeith, Earl of
Lovat-Fraser, James Alexander
Turton, Robert Hugh


Davidson. Rt. Hon. J. C. C.
Lyons, Abraham Montagu
Wallace, Captain D, E. (Hornsey)


Davies, David L. (Pontypridd)
Mabane, William
Ward, Lt.-Col. Sir A. L. (Hull)


Davies, Maj. Geo. F. (Somerset, Yeovil)
MacDonald, Rt. Hon. J. R. (Seaham)
Ward, Sarah Adelaide (Cannock)


Davies, Stephen Owen
MacDonald, Malcolm (Bassetlaw)
Wardlaw-Milne, Sir John S.


Denville, Alfred
McEntee, Valentine L.
Warrender, Sir Victor A. G. 


Despencer-Robertson, Major J. A. F.
McLean, Major Sir Alan
Waterhouse, Captain Charles


Dickie, John P.
Magnay, Thomas
Wedderburn, Henry James Scrymgeour


Dobble, William
Margesson, Capt. Rt. Hon. H. D. R.
West, F. R.


Doran, Edward
Mason, David M. (Edinburgh, E.)
Williams, Edward John (Ogmore)


Duckworth, George A. V.
Mayhew, Lieut.-Colonel John
Willoughby de Eresby, Lord


Edge, Sir William
Mills, Sir Frederick (Leyton, E.)
Wills, Wilfrid D.


Essenhigh, Reginald Clare
Mills, Major J. D. (New Forest)
Wilmot, John


Evans, Capt. Arthur (Cardiff, S.)
Mitchell, Sir W. Lane (Streatham)
Wilson, Clyde T. (West Toxteth)


Evans, R. T. (Carmarthen)
Molson, A. Hugh Eisdale
Windsor-Cilve, Lieut.-Colonel George


Fermoy, Lord
Monsell, Rt. Hon. Sir B. Eyres
Winterton, Rt. Hon. Earl


Fox, Sir Gifford
Morrison, G. A. (Scottish Univer'ties)
Womersley, Sir Walter


Fraser, Captain Sir Ian
Nation, Brigadler-General J. J. H.
Worthington, Dr. John V.


Fremantle, Sir Francis
Nicholson, Godfrey (Morpeth)



Fuller, Captain A.G.
O'Donovan, Dr. William James
TELLERS FOR THE NOES.—


Galbraith, James Francis Wallace
O'Neill, Rt. Hon. Sir Hugh
Sir George Penny and Dr. Morris-Jones


Ganzonl, Sir John
Patrick, Colin M.



Gardner, Benjamin Walter
Percy, Lord Eustace

Amendment proposed [3rd April]: In page 122, line 15, at the end, to insert the words:
If the sterling value of the rupee should at any time fall below one shilling and sixpence, any such person as aforesaid shall be entitled to receive from the revenues of the Federation or, as the case may be, from the revenues of a Province in respect any
payment of salary falling due to him at such time an additional sum equivalent to the difference between the sterling value of such salary at the date of payment, and the sterling value of such salary calculated at the rate of one shilling and sixpence to each rupee."—[Mr. D. D. Reid.]

Question again proposed "That those words be there inserted."

1.20 p.m.

Mr. WISE: I wish to urge the Under-Secretary to give favourable consideration to this Amendment. There have been several occasions on which the depreciation of currencies has adversely affected British officers serving in the countries concerned. There is one case which is not a matter of personal recollection with me because it occurred before I was born, when the transfer from sterling to dollars in the Colony of Hong Kong was followed by a very rapid depreciation in the value of the Chinese dollar which had a very serious effect not only on the incomes but on the pensions of serving officers there. There is a more recent case which will be within the memory of the Committee, namely, that of the transfer which took place in East Africa from the rupee to the shilling. In some cases officers derived considerable benefit from the stabilisation of the rupee at 2s., but in other cases they were adversely affected. In this matter we should, if we can do so, protect officers, particularly British officers, from any possible adverse effect of the Federal currency policy.
It is no disgrace to the Federal currency Board or whatever the body may he, to say that it may depreciate the rupee. Whatever may be said by my hon. Friend the Member for East Edinburgh (Mr. D. M. Mason) the depreciation of the pound sterling has in fact been of considerable benefit in this country and it is quite possible that in India it may be found necessary to do the same sort of thing. It is likely that a Government which has been securing a comparatively favourable balance of trade only by a steady export of gold during the last three years, may have to indulge in some form of currency depreciation. I do not think it would be fair to compel India to put its currency permanently on sterling if it does not wish to do so, but I think that officers from this country who, on retirement, will come back to live in this country and who have to keep their families in this country, ought to be protected against any adverse effect arising from Indian currency policy. It is true that if the value of the rupee appreciated, they would derive consider-
able benefit but in these days it is almost inconceivable to think of any currency gaining in value. There seems to be a race in depreciation and, therefore, I do not think that point arises. I hope my hon. Friend will be able to give some assurance that the Government will do something about this, possibly on the Report stage.

1.24 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: I can understand the motives of those who have moved this Amendment but I wonder what will be its precise effect. I take, very largely, the view which the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Spark-brook (Mr. Amery) advanced last night. It would be fair, J. think, to compensate the civil servant in respect of any loss that might come about through the depreciation of the sterling value of the rupee in respect of any sums that he transfers from India to this country. There, I think, is a case for compensation, but if you do not limit it to that little category of payments, but spread it over the whole field of his salary, there must be a consequential effect. Would it not mean that if you applied it over the whole field of salary, you would have to apply it not only to the British members of the civil service, but to the Indians as well? If, therefore, my hon. Friends opposite are only thinking of safeguarding the British section of the service because of the additional expenses incurred in this country, you should do it by limiting it to that side of the payments, but if you applied it over the whole of the salary, it must mean a consequential increase of salary all the way round. I cannot say that I would be opposed to the first proposition, but I cannot see why there should be at once, ipso facto, an increase of salary in so far as it applied to currency in India itself.

1.27 p.m.

Sir JOHN WARDLAW-MILNE: The motives underlying the Amendment have my deepest sympathy. I am entirely in favour of securing compensation for British officers in India in the event of a severe fall in the exchange and the consequent rise in the price of living, but the actual wording of the Amendment would not, I think, achieve that object. It goes very much farther than that and would imply the giving of compensation where, I think, compensation would not be required, in cases such as have been
referred to by the last speaker. There is, however, a further point which I think the Movers of the Amendment would have to consider and that is whether it is desirable at all to put a provision of this kind into the Bill. This is not a new matter, this question of compensation for British officers, arid. it cannot be settled in any one definite direction. It might well be that a change of currency in the future would require more than one method of adjustment, in which case it would be very unwise, in the interests of the British officers themselves, to stereotype the matter in this way.
I do not want, however, in saying that, to be led into suggesting that there is not another side to this question. The other objection to the Amendment is that it specifies a fall of the sterling value of the rupee from 1s. 6d., but in the last 30 or 40 years in India before the War the rupee was never fixed at 1s. 6d. It was sometimes at 2s. and sometimes,' to my knowledge, at Is. Id. and is. 2d. Consequently, it is impossible to put the thing clown as a definite change from the figure of Is. 6d. I am not sure that—I throw this out as an illustration—if I were at this moment going to consider at what price compensation would have to be paid, I would take Is. 6d. as the basis. Let us be honest. They have benefited a good deal from the rise of the rupee from 1s. 4d. to 1s. 6d., and I am one of those who at any rate do not shut my eyes to the fact that India might benefit considerably by a reduction of the rupee to 1s. 4d. I do not want to give a definite opinion, but there is a good deal to be said on both sides of the question. The extent to which the ryot may be suffering from the 1s. 6d. rupee would have to be taken into consideration. I do not want to go into these matters, but these are all reasons why it is impossible to accept the Amendment in the first place and really inadvisable particularly to put this matter into the Bill at all. I should be very much more inclined to leave Secretaries of State in the future with power to deal with the matter of compensation when the British element in the service especially is affected, because in some cases they will be affected when the Indian members are not. This is a matter which should be considered at the time rather than being put into the Bill now.

1.30 p.m.

Mr. DAVID MASON: I should like to support what my hon. Friend the Member for Kidderminster (Sir J. Wardlaw-Milne) has just said, while sympathising with my hon. Friends opposite with regard to the hardship which might be caused by the fall of the rupee. I would point out, however, that the Bill distinctly says in Clause 238:
If by reason of anything done under this Part of this Act the conditions of service of any person appointed to a civil service by the Secretary of State have been adversely affected, or if for any other reason it appears to the Secretary of State that compensation ought to be granted to, or in respect of, any such person, he or his representatives shall be entitled to receive from the revenues of the Federation, or if the Secretary of State so directs, from the revenues of a Province, such compensation as the Secretary of State may consider just and equitable.
That surely would meet the views of my hon. Friends opposite, but to endeavour to put into the Bill a more or less stereotyped guarantee of what the rupee should be seems to me to be both unwise and most inadvisable. I do not propose to go into the question of the merits or demerits of currency stabilisation. We have had that question debated from time to time, but the fact that this Amendment is on the Paper is another illustration of the terrible hardships and disadvantages from which we suffer owing to the lack of stabilisation. I hope the Government will adhere to the Clause as it stands.

1.32 p.m.

Mr. RAIKES: I should like briefly to support the principle of the Amendment. I rather agree with certain hon. Members who have spoken that the exact wording of the Amendment might not perhaps be entirely suitable for bringing into operation what we all desire, which is that, in the event of the depreciation of the rupee, it should be possible to see that there should be a fair allowance to make up for it to British officers. I feel that the principle that the depreciation of the rupee should be followed by compensation for British officers should be recognised by some form of wording in the Bill, and I hope the Government will consider doing it. Undoubtedly, as the Secretary of State said last night, in the past when there has been a depreciation of the rupee allowances have been given, and the right hon. Gentleman said quite openly that he was prepared to go on
doing it. I entirely accept his word over that, but I see in the future a big difference. You are Indianising your civil service more and more as the years go on, and that means that the British element will get smaller, and there is likely to be more pressure on Secretaries of State in the future against their being allowed to give sums out of the Indian revenues for a diminishing number of British officers. That pressure is bound to arise. It may indeed well be that that pressure will be effective if you have a weak Secretary of State in the distant future.
I think it will be agreed that the services themselves are not satisfied with the Clause, but want to have something put in in order to assist them in this matter. The depreciation of currency is bound to occur. That, I think, is generally recognised, and there is no need to go into the merits of it, except that I would say to the hon. Member for Kidderminster (Sir J. Wardlaw-Milne), who said he would have depreciation in the interests of the ryot, that you will have depreciation all right with the new Government, but you will have it very largely because the Bombay mill owner has been advocating it for a considerable time, and he wants to see the value of real wages falling. Under this Bill, he is a gentleman of considerable importance. The agricultural landowner also wants depreciation because it will help him in regard to debts and mortgages. But what the ryot has to say about it will very much affect whether we have depreciation or not.
I appeal to my hon. Friend to consider whether some step can be taken between now and the Report stage to safeguard the British officer in regard to the exchange value. A depreciation of currency in the long run will mean a rise of prices. That is what it is meant to do. Of course, the Indian officer, like the British officer, has been obliged to keep up a certain standard as an officer, but, if the rupee depreciates, he may find it almost impossible to keep up that standard which largely encouraged him probably to go into that particular service. The more vital and immediate point is the question of the exchange, 9 because, as soon as the value of the rupee falls, it means at once depreciation of exchange, and that means that those who
send remittances home to their families will be in a hard and difficult position. Exchange compensation allowances were made in 1920 when the rupee fell to 1.s. 3d. Very largely on account of that, that was considered the time when allowances ought to be made, and when it again it was stabilised at 1s. 6d. That is why that figure has been taken in the Amendment.

1.37 p.m.

Lord EUSTACE PERCY: May I make an appeal to my hon. Friend the Under-Secretary of State? We are faced with this difficulty. My hon. Friend's are asking for an undertaking from the Government that they will consider sympathetically the principle of putting something like this into the Bill. This Amendment would not do it, and there is a further point as to whether you can put this principle into statutory form in any way which is flexible enough to meet the variety of situations which might arise in future. For instance, take one hypothesis that has been mentioned, the change in salaries in Hong Kong from one basis to another. Suppose there was a partial change from the rupee to the sterling basis in the case of marriage allowances. Then clearly any statutory provisions that went. on the basis of compensation for depreciation of the rupee would make nonsense. That, I think, is the real difficulty. There is the further difficulty whether, if you specify in the statute one reason for compensation, you may not very much weaken the case for other forms of compensation. Then comes in the important question of the rise in the cost of living in India. These are things that have to be considered.
I do not agree with the. Secretary of State when he said that it was undesirable to mention the possibility of the depreciation of the rupee. That is a bad argument. There is nothing atrocious about depreciation. On the contrary, the right hon. and gallant Gentleman the Member for Newcastle-under-Lyme (Colonel Wedgwood) would agree that it is a most respectable and desirable course. The appeal I would make to my right hon. Friend is that he should undertake to look into this question between now and the Report stage in consultation with my hon. Friends who have supported this Amendment, and to discuss the matter with us. That would meet my.
difficulty because, although I doubt whether any statutory provision, however much you may want to make it, is possible, even those who hold that view might quite well undertake to explore the whole question in discussion with the hon. Members who support the Amendment.

1.40 p.m.

The UNDER-SECRETARY of STATE for INDIA (Mr. Butler): In response to the invitation which has been given to us by the Noble Lord, I would say we have not had very many new arguments put forward this afternoon. My right hon. Friend spoke last night upon this subject and stated in general terms the views of the Government. Since that time the views of the Committee have crystallized on the subject, because during our debate to-day there seems to be general agreement that, although we would all wish compensation to be given in cases of depreciation of the rupee, the terms of this Amendment are not desirable because they are too rigid. That being the case, I think that I had first better repeat that we consider it would be well nigh impossible to put anything satisfactory in the Statute upon this subject. The conditions which may arise in future, as has been pointed out by the hon. Member for Kidderminster (Sir J. Wardlaw-Milne), may be so very different. There are so many different questions to take into consideration, such as those which have been put forward by the right hon. Member for Sparkbrook (Mr. Amery) and others. For instance, there are some people who went into the Service when the rate of the rupee was 1s. 4d. There are other details to be taken into consideration, such as that a portion of the pay of certain members of the Service is paid in sterling in overseas allowances. There is too, the question of the cost of living in India and the effect of this upon certain members of the Service who are Indians and others who are Europeans.
There are all those conditions and future possibilities to be taken into account. The Noble Lord the right hon. Member for Hastings (Lord E. Percy) drew attention to one or two other matters which would also have to be taken into account. In view of all these problems and the difficulty of meeting them in any simple and easy matter in
the Statute, we consider that the matter had much better be left to the discretion of the Secretary of State to carry on the policy which he has undertaken in the past. On the other hand, if the Noble Lord the right hon. Member for Hastings considers that it would be valuable, my right hon. Friend would be perfectly ready to talk the matter over with him and other hon. Members who have raised this question before the Report stage, in view of the unanimity of opinion in the Committee that this matter should be met. I do not want to give any undertaking that we have any easy method of placing it on the Statute, since we consider that it would be very difficult and, if put in in the wrong way, would be very undesirable.

1.44 p.m.

Colonel WEDGWOOD: I hope that the Secretary of State will think twice and several times before he does meet this situation, because it will be really the most damaging precedent if you compensate the Englishman who is a civil servant in India for a fall in the value of currency and do not compensate the civil servant in this country for a fall in the value of our currency. If there is ground for compensation in India, there is just as much ground for increasing salaries here, including that of the right hon. Gentleman, by 50 per cent, at the present time. It would be an entirely new precedent in legislation if we had a Clause to this effect put in any Bill. It would mean that future Governments would be shackled always by the liability to pay enormous compensation, because there is no reason why this should be limited to civil servants; it might extend to all the railway workers and, indeed, to everybody else in the country. That is one great danger of putting into this Bill anything in the shape of statutory compensation for these cases.
I am one of those who are profoundly convinced, and I have been for a long time, that it would be in the interests of India that the rupee should fall from 1s. 6d. to 1s. 4d., go back to the old valuation. If this Amendment is accepted, or any guarantee of any sort goes in that the rupee is always to be paid to English people at Is. 6d., we shall be severely hampering the future of the Government of India. It would then be impossible for any revaluation
of the rupee to take place. I am not quite certain what the Secretary of State thinks on this question of revaluation in the future. There would be the question of guaranteeing the Council of India Bills, and that would be increasingly impracticable for the British Government if the Indian Government were compelled to take the rupee at 1s. 6d. By such a change in the law as is proposed we should be preventing an economic change which may be necessary and desirable from the point of view of the Indian exchange.

Mr. D. D. REID: In view of what has been said, and the possibility of further discussion on this question before the Report stage, I ask leave to withdraw the Amendment.

Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.

Clause, as amended, ordered to stand part of the Bill.

CLAUSE 239.—(Application of four last preceding sections to persons appointed by Secretary of State in Council, persons holding reserved posts and commissioned officers in civil employment.)

1.48 p.m.

Sir WILLIAM WAYLAND: I have put down the following Amendment upon the Order Paper: In page 133, line 10, to leave out sub-section (3), and to insert:
(3) Nothing in this Act or in any rules made under this Act, and no repeal made by this Act of any enactment and no provision of any Act of any legislature in India shall take effect so as to deprive any person mentioned in the last two preceding Sub-sections of any right given, preserved, or continued to such person by or under section ninety-six B of the Government of India Act or any rules made under that Act.
The Bill nowhere contains a definite and explicit provision for preserving the existing rights and conditions of service for officers now in the service who have been appointed by the Secretary of State in Council. Such protection is probably implied or might be found by an intricate process of comparison of and between the various Clauses and provisions in different parts of the Services section. The difficulty seems to be largely due to the way in which the case of such officers, namely, those appointed by the Secretary of State in Council, is linked up by means
of Clause 239 to the case of officers dealt with in the four immediately preceding Clauses—

Sir S. HOARE: Will my hon. and gallant Friend allow me to make a short intervention? I am informed by the draftsman that the Bill as it is safeguards the position much more definitely than would the Amendment which my hon. and gallant Friend has devised, and that the Services would be much better satisfied with the Bill as it is than they would be if the proposed Amendment were included.

Sir W. WAYLAND: After the right hon. Gentleman's observations I do not propose to move the Amendment. The only point was that having regard to the four previous Clauses it was not definitely clear whether the entire rights of the officers appointed were guarded, and in view of the Debate which we have had this morning I am perfectly confident that the Secretary of State would not wish that there should be any doubt on the point.

1.50 p.m.

Lieut.-Colonel APPLIN: I beg to move, ill page 133, line 23, at the end, to insert:
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in Sub-section (1) of the section of this Act of which the marginal note is Conditions of service, pensions, etc., of persons recruited by Secretary of State,' the conditions of service of the persons mentioned in the first two Sub-sections of this section shall be regulated by rules to be made by the Secretary of State with the concurrence of his advisers in respect of all matters in respect of which the said conditions were, before the commencement of Part III of this Act, regulated by rules made by the Secretary of State in Council.
Provided that no rule made under this Sub-section shall have effect so as to give to any person less favourable terms as regards rights and conditions of service than were given to such person by rules made by the Secretary of State in Council.
The provisions of Sub-section (3) of this Act of which the marginal note is Reserved posts 'shall apply to any rules made under this Sub-section.
This is a difficult Amendment to move at this particular moment, because after the Debate which has taken place on the whole position of the Civil Servant, I am not sure that even this Amendment is entirely adequate, though it certainly is far more necessary, after what we have heard this morning, than I believed it
was when I first put it down. Sub-section (1) of Clause 236 obliges the Secretary of State to make rules on certain matters, namely, pay, leave and pensions. As regards other matters unspecified, he may or may not make rules as he pleases. If he does not, it is obvious the rules will have to be made by the Governor-General or Governors or other persons deputed by them. The Services are under very considerable apprehension about the Secretary of State deputing this rule-making power. It is true that it covers leave and pensions and so on, or could be made to cover most of the matters which at present are regulated by the rules of the Secretary of State in Council, but there are certain matters about which the position remains rather indefinite; for instance, the rules regulating home allowances, provision for medical treatment and things of that nature. The object of this Amendment is to ensure that the Secretary of State shall be obliged, as regards officers now in the service, to make rules for all matters which are regulated at present by the rules made by the Secretary of State in Council, so that no new rule shall be less favourable than the corresponding one now in existence. If the Committee will refer to paragraphs (a) and (b) of Sub-section (2) of this Clause it will be seen that (a) says:
Not being a person appointed as aforesaid by the Secretary of State or Secretary of State in Council, holds or has held a reserved post.
These civil servants who are not appointed by the Secretary of State would, without this Amendment, as far as I am able to understand, come under rules made either by the Governor-General, the Governor, or authorities or persons appointed by them. It is because of pressure which may be and probably would be upon these persons that this Amendment is put forward. I see no reason why the Secretary of State should not grant this quite small safeguard. Paragraph (b) of Sub-section (2) says:
holds or has held any civil post under the Crown in India and is or was when he was first appointed to such a post an officer in His Majesty's forces.
Possibly the Committee will not understand the position of that portion of the Civil Service in India. A high number of appointments in India are held by officers, and usually by officers of the Indian Army. They are transferred to certain
appointments for which they are peculiarly qualified by reason of their service in the Army. I have known many of them personally. They are men who have made a life study of Indian conditions, possibly of one particular Province or part of India. They know the language, and they are probably interpreters of the language; they know the people, their customs, religions and habits. They are peculiarly fitted for these posts. Such a post often carries with it a position of a semi-military character. The posts are either on the frontier or in the native States, where an officer of the Indian Army is peculiarly fitted to hold the post.
It is for the protection of these that acceptance of my Amendment is so essential. It is a very small thing to ask that the Secretary of State should take to himself power instead or delegating it —I cannot see why it should be delegated—for the protection of our own people who are in the Civil Service. After what I have said, and in the knowledge that the civil servants are in real fear of the consequences of the safeguards, I hope that the Secretary of State will retain in his own hands the careers and the future of these officers. I very much doubt whether officers who are now in the Indian Army would be prepared to sacrifice years of service to be transferred into the Civil Service if they had not the knowledge that their careers, their appointments and all the details were protected under the hand of the Secretary of State, and were not delegated to those who may be advised by Ministers appointed under the Bill, or under a Governor who may himself be an Indian. I urge the right hon. Gentleman to accept the Amendment and to grant this little safeguard for those who have spent their lives in India.

2.0 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL (Sir Donald Somervell): I do not know whether the hon. and gallant Member for Enfield (Lieut.-Colonel Applin) was in the House, but he has raised exactly the same point as one which was raised yesterday on Clause 236, and with which I endeavoured to deal. It is not in order for us to go back on that decision, so I will just repeat what I pointed out then.. The Secretary of State is only able to make rules as to the important matters
of pay, leave and pensions. With regard to other matters, he reserves power to step in if he reserves power to step in if he thinks injustice is being done and to make rules. It seems obviously wrong that in matters where there may be occasion not infrequently to alter the regulations in order to suit local needs and changing circumstances, the rule-making power should not be in the hands of those on the spot. Certainly that is a more satisfactory position
The hon. and gallant Member referred to persons who come under paragraph (a) of the clause. That matter is subject to the decision of the Secretary of State and his advisers, who have full power to decide that a person under paragraph (a) shall, for all purposes, privileges and rights, be in the same position as those recruited by the Secretary of State, and in all proper cases that right would be exercised. Should the event arise that a person not appointed as aforesaid held a reserved post, he would be given the same privileges an put in the same position as a holder of a reserved post appointed by my right hon. Friend. I think those are the only two points raised by the hon. and gallant Member and, in view of what I have said and of the decision which the Committee came to yesterday, I hope that he will not press his Amendment.

2.3 p.m.

Sir A. KNOX: In view of what the Solicitor-General has just said, I should like to remind him that, as I understood, the Secretary of State promised yesterday to give consideration to the question of including certain subjects under paragraph (a) of Clause 236. I asked that the rule making in regard to home allowance and medical treatment should be in the hands of the Secretary of State and not delegated to the Governors or the Governor-General. The Secretary of State ought to be flattered at the wish of the Civil Service to have rules that are kept in the power of the Secretary of State. They do not know who the Governor will be in the future, and they are frightened of that uncertainty. They are thinking of the power of Parliament to control this matter to a certain extent.

2.4 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: What I said last night on Clause 236 will apply equally to Clause 239. It was that if any hon. Member could convince me that there was something in the same category as the other three items in paragraph (a) of Clause 236, I would consider the possibility of including that item with the other three.

Amendment negatived.

2.5 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I beg to move, in page 133, line 32, at the end, to add:
(5) Any liability of the Federation or of any Province to or in respect of any person appointed before the commencement of Part III of this Act by the Secretary of State in Council to a civil service of, or a civil post under, the Crown in India being a liability of such a nature as to have been enforceable in legal proceedings against the Secretary of State in Council if this Act had not been passed shall, notwithstanding anything in this Act, be deemed, for the purposes of the provisions of Part VII of this Act relating to legal proceedings, to be a liability arising under a statute passed before the commencement of Part III of this Act.
This is a drafting Amendment which adds nothing to the intention of the Bill. It reserves the rights of officers who have legal claims which could have been enforced by proceedings against the Secretary of State before the Bill was passed, so that the proceedings can be taken against a Province or the Federation, as the case may be, or, alternatively, against the Secretary of State. It is in accordance with a recommendation of the Joint Select Committee. It was thought that the point was covered in Clause 174, which is in general words, but it is now thought desirable to put the words in here.

2.5 p.m.

Sir R. CRADDOCK: I beg to move, as an amendment to the proposed amendment, in line 3, after the word, "being," to insert:
a liability to pay a pension granted to any such person, or.
This Amendment, which I understand the Secretary of State is willing to accept, is intended to strengthen the possibly loose wording of the Civil Service Regulations which would enable, as regards rupee pensions, the plea to be advanced that there was no liability on
the Secretary of State which could become the subject of a suit to oblige him to pay rupee pensions as distinguished from those of the Indians Civil Service. The object is to give to the rupee pensions of all the Services which differ from the Indian Civil Service the like benefit without any manner of doubt. I apologise to the Committee for the fact that the Amendment is in manuscript form.

2.6 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: I desire to make a modest protest. This is the third time during the present week that manuscript amendments of some importance have been presented to the Committee. Many Members of the Committee have not even seen the present Amendment. We would ask that copies of such Amendment should be circulated to the Committee, so that we may all be able to study them. The Amendments have been on the Paper for some days, and it ought to have been possible to include these manuscript amendments on the Order Paper, instead of moving them in manuscript form.

2.7 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: As one who sinned by handing in a manuscript amendment two or three days ago, I feel that I must point out to the hon. Gentleman that we are working under tremendous pressure, owing to the number of days on which this Bill is being dealt with every week. I do not think that hon. Members opposite have been putting down Amendments to recent Clauses of the Bill as much as we on these Benches have, but I can assure the hon. Gentleman that it is only with the very greatest difficulty that we are able to go through the Amendments so far ahead as to be able to hand in our Amendments in time for them to be printed on the Order Paper.

Amendment to the proposed Amendment agreed to.

Proposed words, as amended, there added.

Clause, as amended, ordered to stand part of the Bill.

CLAUSE 240.—(Staff of High Commissioner and Home Auditor.)

2.9 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: I beg to move, in page 134, line 3, to leave out "in his discretion."
The purpose of my Amendment is to secure that this power of appointment, if it be exercised by the Governor-General, shall not be exercised by him in his discretion, but on the advice of his Ministers. Those who are appointed will be exercising functions of considerable importance, not from the point of view of the Governor-General alone, but from the point of view of the Government itself, provincial or central, and it seems to us to be fair that those who are to audit the accounts even of provinces controlled by commissioners should not be people appointed on the recommendation of the Governor-General in the first instance. The point is well-known. It is the old point as to whether we ought to take away from these new Indian authorities the simple right of making appointments, subject, of course, to the final approval of the Governor-General or of the Governor as the case may be. I feel somewhat alarmed at these repeated efforts to withdraw from the Indian people any share in appointing, or even nominating, people for these various posts.

2.11 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: I think there are particular reasons why these appointments should be made by the Governor-General in his discretion. In the-case of appointments to the staff of the Auditor of Indian Home Accounts, the staff will, I suppose, be mainly British, and that may be to some extent a justification for this form of appointment. There is another reason, which is even stronger. This department will be doing work outside the work connected with the departments of the responsible Ministers in India. For instance, the Auditor of Home Accounts will audit the accounts of the reserved departments, the political departments, and so on, for which the Governor-General is responsible in his discretion. That being so, I think it is essential that the appointments should be in the discretion of the Governor-General, in view of the fact that, as I have said, two sets of work will be done by these officials, on the one hand on behalf of the responsible government and on the other hand on behalf of the Governor-General and the India Office.

Amendment negatived.

Clause ordered to stand part of the Bill.

Clause 241 ordered to stand part of the Bill.

CLAUSE 242.—(Judges of the Federal Court and the High Courts.)

2.13 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I beg to move, in page 135, line 11, to leave out from "pension" to the end of the Clause, and to insert:
which under the rules in force immediately before the commencement of Part III. of this Act was payable to or in respect of any person who, having been a judge of the High Court within the meaning of this Act or of the High Court at Rangoon, retired before the commencement of the said Part III. shall, notwithstanding anything in this Act, continue to be payable in accordance with those rules and shall be charged on the revenues of the Federation.
(3) Any liability of the Federation or of any Province to or in respect of any person who is, at the commencement of Part III. of this Act, a judge of a High Court within the meaning of this Act, or to or in respect of any such person as is mentioned in subsection (2) of this section, being a liability of such a nature as to have been enforceable in legal proceedings against the Secretary of State in Council if this Act had not been passed, shall notwithstanding anything in this Act, be deemed, for the purposes of the provisions of Part VII. of this Act relating to legal proceedings, to be a liability arising under a statute passed before the commencement of Part of this Act.
This is rather a formidable-looking Amendment, but it only carries out the intention of the Bill and, I am sure, of the Committee. A careful examination of the Bill has shown that the position is not quite clearly provided for. The first part of the Amendment deals with the pensions of retired judges, and makes it clear that they are chargeable on the revenues of the Federation. In the Bill as it is at Present drafted, the words which the Amendment proposes to leave out only relate to judges of the High Court of Rangoon. Special provision had to be made for them, because Burma is to be separated from India. It was thought that the judges of the other courts were already provided for, but we find that it is necessary, or at any rate desirable, to make the position clear. The latter part of the Amendment is the same point as that with which I dealt just now, and puts in fresh words to preserve any rights they might have which might be enforceable by legal proceedings.

Amendment agreed to.

Clause, as amended, ordered to stand part of the Bill.

CLAUSE 243.—(District judges, etc.)

2.15 p.m.

Mr. CAMPBELL KER: I beg to move, in page 135, line 17, after "judges," to insert" and presidency magistrates."
This is only a small amendment. The reason for it is that the presidency magistrates do not appear to be included in any other Clauses of the Bill. District magistrates will probably come under Clause 235 as holding reserved posts, and other magistrates will come under Clause 245, which deals with the subordinate criminal magistracy. But those are different classes, and have different responsibilities, and, in particular, they differ from other magistrates in that they have no executive power. They have certain powers under the criminal procedure code, but no executive powers such as other magistrates have. The presidency magistrates have to deal with a very varied population, for instance, in Bombay and Calcutta, and not only different classes of Indian from all parts of India, but with all races. The position which they occupy is very much the same as that of district judges, because they have purely judicial powers and not executive powers. My right hon. Friend has an Amendment down to Clause 245 which deals with the chief presidency magistrates. In view of that, he may find it better to include in this Clause chief presidency magistrates and leave presidency magistrates to be dealt with in Clause 245.

The DEPUTY-CHAIRMAN (Captain Bourne): I think it might be convenient to the Committee if we take at the same time the discussion of the next Amendment—in page 135, line 17, after "judges," to insert "and district magistrates."

2.17 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I think I can reassure my hon. Friend. So far as the chief presidency magistrates are concerned, we agree that their position is comparable to the other judicial authorities, and my right hon. Friend is prepared to see that they are brought within the provisions of the Clause on the Report stage. We would rather not accept my hon. Friend's Amendment at
the moment, because it requires a little consideration, as this Clause is primarily not dealing with magistrates at all. It may be that my hon. Friend has pitched on the right place to put it in, but we want time to consider that. But, so far as the chief presidency magistrates are concerned, we will accept an amendment. We think it would go far to include the subordinate magistracy, and if my hon. Friend is satisfied to that extent, I will say no more.

2.19 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I should like to say a word in regard to this matter, because, as my hon. and learned Friend will have noticed perhaps, I have a somewhat similar Amendment on the Paper which I understand is not to be called. It is an Amendment to insert "presidency small cause court judges."

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: If I may intervene, I would point out that we are proposing to insert the chief judges-I think that is the right expression-of the small courts. The head officer of those courts, I think it should be.

Duchess of ATHOLL: The method of appointment of these very important people seems to us to be a satisfactory one, namely, that it is to be made by the Governor in his individual judgment after consulting the High Court; bir5 we think that the Chief Justice would be better than the Court. I wish to emphasise the importance we attach to all the appointments of any judicial kind, either on the civil or the criminal side, and even the subordinate ones being made by the Governor in his discretion or individual judgment, after consultation, if necessary, with the appropriate legal authorities.

2.21 p.m.

Mr. KER: In view of the statement of my hon. and learned Friend, I am prepared to withdraw the Amendment, but I would suggest that all the magistrates should be included. If, however, the chief presidency magistrates are included, it will go a- long way to meet the necessities of the ease, and therefore I beg to ask leave to withdraw the Amendment.

Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.

Mr. KER: I beg to move, in page 135, line 21, to leave out "High Court," and to insert:
Chief Justice, whose opinion he shall transmit to the Governor along with his own recommendation.
This, also, is a very small Amendment the moving of which may suggest the possession of an over-suspicious mind. The object is to place the procedure to be adopted beyond all doubt. As the Clause stands at present, the minister has to consult the High Court and then make his recommendation to the Governor. It might well be that the minister might report to the Governor that he wished to recommend the following gentlemen—A, B and C. He might then be asked by the Governor what the view of the High Court was, and he would be in a position to reply that he had consulted the High Court, and that was his recommendation, without transmitting to the Governor the views of the Chief Justice. The object of the Amendment is to make the intention of the Government quite clear that the minister has to consult the Chief Justice, and transmit his opinion along with his own recommendation to the Governor.

2.24 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: My hon. Friend indicated that it might seem that he had an over-suspicious mind. In our view, it does not only seem so, but he has, in fact, an over-suspicious mind. We think it undesirable that these words should be introduced. We could not put in words, and it would not be right to put in words, that a minister should consult the Chief Justice and transmit his opinion to the Governor. If there were the slightest suggestion that he had not produced an opinion in writing, the Governor could always say that he wished it to be expressed in writing. Therefore we think it would be unfortunate to insert words which indicate a suspicion in this matter for which, we think, there is no real justification. For these reasons, I ask my hon. Friend not to press the Amendment.

Sir ROBERT HAMILTON: I did not quite understand from the hon. and learned Solicitor-General whether the intention was to consult the High Court or to adopt the suggestion of my hon. Friend to consult the Chief Justice.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: The High Court.

Sir R. HAMILTON: I should like to ask why it is the High Court rather than
the Chief Justice, on whose shoulders the real responsibility for supervising the judiciary of the district falls.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I apologise for not dealing with that point. It was my fault. I did not follow that my hon. Friend had emphasized that part of the Amendment; otherwise, I should certainly have dealt with it. The proper body to consult, in our opinion, is the High Court. At the moment in India in these matters, by convention, it is very often one of the Indian Civil Service judges who is put primarily in charge of making recommendations and giving his opinion as to personnel. If my hon. Friend's Amendment were accepted, the Chief Justice would be the only person with locus stand I to express an opinion. The Chief Justice, being the head of the High Court, has full power to arrange the business of the High Court as he thinks proper. He can consult his colleagues, and obviously the opinion of the court would necessarily carry the concurrence of the Chief Justice. We think that it is right to use words in order to bring in the whole personnel of the court. We do not anticipate any difficulties. Members of the Court confer together in these matters, and we think that the words in the Bill are the proper words.

2.28 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: It did not occur to me that there was any suspicion attached to the Amendment until my hon. and learned Friend spoke.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: My hon. Friend said that he was the person who had the suspicion. He said that he thought that there was suspicion.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I apologise. I only rise to say that I discussed this Clause the other day with a friend of mine of long experience in a High Court of India who was very much of the opinion that the reference should be to the Chief Justice. I understood that that was the normal practice, and he appeared to think that it was a more convenient practice and more workable than reference to the High Court. I feel bound to put that point of view to the
Committee, I cannot express an opinion upon it myself.

Amendment negatived.

Mr. WISE: I beg to move, in page 135, line 24, to leave out "is," and to insert "has been for not less than seven years."
I move this Amendment, which stands in the name of my hon. Friend the Member for South Croydon (Mr. H. Williams), and I hope that the Government will see their way to insert these words in the Bill, because they give a little added precaution and ensure that more suitable appointments are likely to be made to the very important posts of district judges, sessions judges and assistant judges and many others. As the Clause stands, it will be possible—I am not going to say that it is likely to occur—for a young man just called to the Bar to be appointed at once to such posts. We want to take some precaution against that sort of thing happening. The state of India to-day is possibly on a level with the state of this country in the 18th century when such appointments were made constantly in this country to the detriment probably of good order. In this case, I do not think that we would be unduly showing our suspicion of the new Council of State, and not necessarily be offending Indian opinion if we inserted words to say that, before a man was appointed to any of these important posts, he should at least have been a barrister for seven years. That would make it certain that he was of a reasonable mature age before he undertook these judicial functions. Appointments from the Indian Civil Service itself could be made as hitherto by the Governor or Governor-General. This only applies to men who are not qualified by being already in His Majesty's Service, and I hope that the Government will see their way to accept the Amendment.

2.31 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: This is a very small point, but, on the whole, we would rather leave the Bill as it is. Let me follow out the suggestion behind the Amendment. It means that, if these words were not inserted, the hon. Member thinks that the Governor-General or the Governor of a Province, in his individual judgment, might
appoint an unsuitable man of less than seven years' standing. The only point in the limitation is to prevent unsuitable men from being appointed. Therefore, the suggestion is that if we do not hedge him about with this restriction the Governor of a Province, exercising his individual judgment, will appoint an excessively junior man. We do not think that there is the slightest possibility of making a partial appointment on that or any other grounds, and we think that it is better to leave his discretion unfettered. I entirely agree with My hon. Friend that it is unlikely, for these posts, that you will consider anybody of less than seven years' standing, but, on the other hand, you do get exceptional cases of men, who have considerable general experience and may be called to the Bar perhaps at the age of 30 or 32 after very considerable experience of other kinds in the world, who absorb the law and its mysteries very rapidly, and who may qualify with less than seven years' standing. As the Governor can exercise his individual judgment, we do not think it is necessary to edge him about, as it is unlikely that he will ever want to appoint any one with less than seven years' standing.

Lieut.-Colonel APPLIN: Is it not a fact that a barrister cannot be appointed to a judicial post in this country until he has been called ten years, and why should the distribution be more invidious in the case of a judge in India?

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I am afraid that I have not all the information in my bead. The fact that in the case of a High Court judge in this country it is only ten years, leads me to suppose that in the case of recorders or county court judges, probably it is a less qualification. I cannot speak as to that, because I have not all the figures in mind.

2.34 p.m.

Mr. HERBERT WILLIAMS: I apologise to the Committee for not being in my place when the Amendment was called, but I have been meeting a deputation from constituents who have come to see me. I am grateful to my hon. Friend the Member for Smethwick (Mr. Wise) for moving the Amendment in my absence. I am afraid that the statement of the Solicitor-General does not quite satisfy me. He says that there is no need to worry because a Governor would not be so foolish as to appoint an unqualified
person. If that be the case, why in Clause 190 have we protected the Secretary of State, presumably on whose advice His Majesty's Government will act in appointing persons to the Federal court? In that case it is provided that the person
has been for at least five years a judge of a High Court in British India or in a Federated State; or
is a barrister of England or Northern Ireland of at least ten years standing, or a member of the Faculty of Advocates in Scotland of at least ten years standing; or
has been for at least ten years a pleader of a High Court in British India or in a Federated State or of two or more such Courts in succession.
The Secretary of State in his wisdom has inserted those checks on his own action and on the action of his successors in advising His Majesty with regard to appointments under the Royal Sign Manual, where there is less need for a check because those appointments are of such magnitude that if a bad one were made it would he a scandal. Here are appointments of less importance, and I selected a period of seven years instead of 10 years because those are not quite as exalted appointments as those mentioned in Clause 190 and therefore there ought to be some check. I shall be glad if the Solicitor-General will explain why he thinks it is unnecessary to impose any restrictions on the Governor with regard to these less important appointments when it is thought necessary to impose restrictions in respect of appointments of judges by His Majesty under the Royal Sign Manual. I should have thought that there was need for more check in regard to these appointments which are not so important than in respect of the appointments in regard to which very exalted persons are brought in in connection with the appointments to the High Court.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: If my hon. Friend will move his amendment to substitute five years instead of seven years we will accept it.

Mr. WILLIAMS: I shall be glad to withdraw the seven years in order to insert five years.

The CHAIRMAN: The proper method of dealing with the matter is for this amendment to be withdrawn and then the hon. Member can move another amendment.

Mr. WILLIAMS: I beg to ask leave to withdraw the amendment.

2.38 p.m.

Sir H. CROFT: We are grateful to the Solicitor-General for taking that view on a matter which has been expressed so moderately and courteously by my hon. Friend. I would remind the Solicitor-General that in doing so he is not merely meeting fractious criticism. We desire to impress upon the Committee that in matters of this kind we are looking many years ahead. The Solicitor-General said that the inference was that the Governor would appoint an improper person. I would say that some Governors may be very inexperienced. I think the Secretary of State will not deny that we may conceivably have Indian Governors in the future and they may be men with very little experience of this kind of choice. We personally are not going to have much, if anything, to do with the matter in those days. Therefore I think it is wise, and I am very grateful for it, that the Government have accepted the spirit of the amendment, and my hon. Friend is wise to accept it.

Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.

Mr. H. WILLIAMS: I beg to move, in page 135, line 24, to leave out "is", and to insert, "has been for not less than five years".
May I say how grateful I am to the Solicitor-General?

Amendment agreed to.

2.40 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I beg to move, in page 135, line 30, to leave out "and".
This Amendment and the one that follows fill up an accidental omission. The assistant sessions judge will correspond with the sessions judge already included.

Amendment agreed to.

Further Amendment made: in line 30, at the end, add
and assistant sessions judge. —[The Solicitor-General.]

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Clause, as amended, stand part of the Bill."

2.41 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: Before we pass from this Clause I feel it necessary
to draw attention to the importance of the provision made in Sub-section (2), to which I had put down an amendment that has not been called. The Sub-section closes one of the two avenues to the High Court at present open to members of the Indian Civil Service. It closes it not for those now in the Civil Service but I understand for those who may be appointed hereafter to that service. If I am wrong I shall be only too happy to have a statement to that effect from my hon. and learned Friend the Solicitor-General. May I put the matter in the form of a question? Sub-section (2) says:
A person not already in the service of His Majesty shall only be eligible to be appointed a district judge if he is a barrister, a member of the Faculty of Advocates in Scotland, or a pleader and is recommended by the High Court for appointment.
That seems to me clearly to indicate that a person not already in the service of His Majesty who is not a barrister or a pleader or a member of the Faculty of Advocates in Scotland will be ineligible in future for appointment as a judge. That is how the Sub-section has been understood I believe by members of the Service concerned. At the present time the district judge is the person who gives decisions on civil cases immediately below the High Court. The sessions judge is the person who gives decisions on criminal cases immediately below the High Court. Both those avenues to-day are open to members of the Civil Service.

Sir S. HOARE: The Clause makes no change in the present position.

Duchess of ATHOLL: Will my right hon. Friend make that very clear before the Report stage?

Sir S. HOARE: Yes, if necessary.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I believe that statement will be read with tremendous relief by members of the Civil Service, who have been extremely anxious about the matter.

2.43 p.m.

Mr. A. SOMERVILLE: The Clause provides that the appointment of district judges shall be made by the Governor of the Province. There was an Amendment on the Order Paper to insert after "judges" the words "district magistrates." It is very important that their
appointment should be kept free from political influence as far as possible. May I ask the Secretary of State whether he has considered that Amendment and if so whether he will insert the words "and district magistrates" on the Report stage?

2.44 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: There are two answers to my hon. Friend. District magistrates are reserved posts and their appointment and posting will be safeguarded by Clause 235. The appointments and postings will be in the hands of the Secretary of State—other than posts in connection with any functions of the Governor-General which he is required to exercise in his discretion—and it would be inconsistent to say that they should be appointed under this Clause. The other answer is that this Clause provides for consultation with the High Court. The High Court will have no particular means of information as to those who are made district magistrates. The real answer to the hon. Member is that they are already dealt with as reserved posts in an earlier clause.

Question, "That the Clause, as amended, stand part of the Bill" put, and agreed to.

CLAUSE 244.—(Subordinate civil judicial service.)

2.46 p.m.

Mr. WISE: I beg to move, in page 135, line 35, after "civil," to insert "and criminal".
The Indian legal system is rather complicated and I am not quite as clear as I ought to be as to the respective positions of the various courts in India, but I am informed that in Bengal there are subordinate criminal posts which deal exclusively with criminal matters as against civil. It seems an extraordinary situation, and it is important therefore, more particularly in the case of criminal than civil magistrates, that their qualifications should be of the highest possible order, and that they should be subject to the same careful selection as their colleagues who deal only with civil cases. I hope the Government will be able to accept the Amendment.

2.47 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: This is not so small a matter as the hon. Member has seemed to suggest by his speech.
It is a matter of some importance and complexity. It would be quite impossible and inappropriate to introduce the word "criminal" into this clause. It first of all provides that there shall be certain rules drawn up as to the qualifications for subordinate civil magistrates, then proceeds to provide that the service commission shall make a list of suitable candidates, and then that the High Court, and this is the most important part of the clause, shall deal with their posting and promotion. The High Court would be quite the wrong body to deal with the posting and promotion of subordinate magistrates. They know nothing about them, but whereas appeals from the subordinate civil judiciary go to the High Court, apeals from subordinate magistrates do not in the ordinary course. Further, there is in India a combination between the executive and criminal judiciary functions, especially in the lower grades. There, when you are considering the appointment of subordinate magistrates, or subordinate criminal magistrates, you have to consider a man's executive qualifications as well as his judicial qualifications. Here, dealing with civil magistrates, the question of executive qualifications do not arise. The main purpose of the clause in giving the High Court, the duty of dealing with posting and promotions is to give it to the High Court whose knowledge is necessarily confined to a knowledge of the judicial capacity of the candidate. For these reasons I have to resist the Amendment. The machinery of the clause would be quite inappropriate and indeed inefficient for dealing with subordinate magistrates.

Amendment negatived.

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Clause stand part of the Bill."

2.52 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I should like to draw the attention of the Committee to the fact that the powers which the clause gives, of making rules which limit the High Court in their appointments, might operate to prevent the best persons being appointed to the judiciary. There are already some rules in existence in one Province which determine how the appointments by the High Court are to represent the various religous com-
munities. In the Punjab there are rules, made long ago, which provide that out of every eleven judges appointed by the High Court to the subordinate judiciary four must be Hindus, four must be Moslems, two Sikhs, and one must be a Christian, and that not less than 50 per cent. of the 10 non-Christians must belong to what are known as the agricultural tribes, that is persons who may own and cultivate land. These rules have been pressed on the Punjab Government by the strength of communal feeling, and it has been said to me by ex-judges of the Punjab High Court that as a result of having to abide by these regulations the judges of the High Court have often to go far down the list of the successful candidates in an examination before they can find a person who has the desired qualifications as to community or tribe.
Two of these ex-judges of the Punjab, nearly two years ago, told me that as a result they have had to make their appointments largely without taking into account personal character or professional efficiency. Therefore, it seems a much more serious matter than might appear on the surface. Not long after my conversation with these ex-judges a member of the Punjab Government, who was replying to a suggestion that the judges of the High Court had not observed these regulations, said that so scrupulously had they been observing them that in order to find a Christian to promote to the bench in his turn they had had to go down to the 90th place on the list of candidates. That will give some idea of how very hampering these rules may be to judges of the High Court in selecting the persons best qualified mentally and personally, and in regard to professional efficiency. I have felt it my duty to call the attention of the Committee to the type of rules already in existence which are likely to increase under the new conditions in India.

Question "That the Clause stand part of the Bill," put, and agreed to.

CLAUSE 245.—(Subordinate criminal magistracy.)

2.55 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I beg to move, in page 136, line 24, after "to," to insert:
or the withdrawal of any magisterial powers from.
This Clause provides that no recommendation shall be made for the grant of magisterial powers or of enhanced magisterial powers excepting after consultation with the district magistrate of the district in which the person concerned is working. The same principle which applies in the granting of magisterial powers ought to apply to the withdrawal or diminution of magisterial powers, and the first Amendment on the Order Paper —which is really only a drafting Amendment—puts that right. I may perhaps just say a word on the second Amendment, which is also a drafting Amendment. It is simply filling up a gap in the Clause and does not alter the scope and intention of the Clause. It simply provides that where you are dealing with the jurisdiction of a Presidency magistrate the Chief Presidency Magistrate obviously would be the proper person to be consulted. The second Amendment on the Paper covers that case.

Amendment agreed to.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I beg to move, in page 136, line 25, at the end, to add:
or with the Chief Presidency Magistrate, as the case may be

2.57 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I should like to ask my hon. and learned Friend who is the person to consult with the district magistrate? Is it the Governor or is it the minister? If it is the Governor, is it the Governor acting in his individual judgment? And might we know what the present procedure is, so that we may understand what change, if any, the Clause will make?

2.58 p.m.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I am not sure whether I can very satisfactory answer to my Noble Friend. I took the Clause as being quite general in dealing with any case where there is any question of a magistrate having his powers increased or diminished. I should have thought that certainly in the case of subordinate magistrates recommendations of this kind could be made by ministers, because when we come to the powers of judges—as dealt with in the Clauses which we have just passed—their position could not be dealt with except by the Governor acting in his individual
judgment. I think broadly that is right. When we are dealing with subordinate magistrates, the question of the increase or withdrawal of their powers would be within the capacity of ministers.

2.59 p.m.

Sir R. CRADDOCK: May I add a word or two to what the learned Solicitor-General has said. Under the present practice, it would probably be the district magistrate who would move in the first instance, and he would send his recommendation to the local government through the commissioner of his division. Unless that procedure is going to be altered, that consultation must always necessarily take place before the case reaches the Minister. All the same, the Clause is very valuable in cases where people might go direct to the Minister and not through the recognised channel with a view to giving or withdrawing powers.

Duchess of ATHOLL: May we know what the present practice is?

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: I thought that my hon. Friend had just told us exactly what the present practice is.

Duchess of ATHOLL: At the lower end —but I do not think he mentioned what happens at the other end, whether the matter rested ultimately with the Government or with the Home Member or what.

The SOLICITOR-GENERAL: Obviously, to-day this would not be a transferred Service and it would rest with the Provincial Government.

Amendment agreed to.

Clause, as amended, ordered to stand part of the Bill.

Clause 246 ordered to stand part of the Bill.

CLAUSE 247.—(Provisions for protection of existing officers of "Central Services, Classes I and II," and "Provincial Services.")

3.2 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: I beg to move, in page 137, line 7, to leave out Sub-section (1).
The effect of Clause 247, as I understand it, is that no civil posts of a certain grade can be abolished if that abolition
involves adversely some person or persons. There are certain exceptions to that rule. I am not quite sure what the words" "adversely affect" mean precisely. I think I recall that in the Joint Select Committee there was some sort of discussion concerning this question of guaranteeing to people their right of promotion. If their promotion was jeopardised, then the subject of compensation to them would have to be considered. Would it be argued that the words "adversely affect" could be interpreted in this way? Suppose that the holder of a post had vacated it and that the authorities then decided not to fill up the post would not the words "adversely affected" be then properly interpreted as meaning that by not keeping that post open a second person who ordinarily would be promoted to that chief post would lose by it?
The point we have in mind is just this. Everybody knows that the cost of the Services in India—I am speaking from the Indian point of view—is deemed to be somewhat heavy. There are British officers and Indians. The scale of salaries is based on what is deemed to be appropriate to a Britisher occupying a given post, and because of the difficulty of making any differentiation the Indian officers are paid on the same basis. If the Services were wholly Indian it might very well be that the rate of salary would be much less. Suppose that the Indian Ministry desire to effect an economy by not filling up a post that has become vacant. Surely there ought to be no impediment placed in the way of their realising that ambition by not filling up a post. But clearly, if the interpretation that I have just given to the words "adversely affect" is the proper interpretation that cannot be done, because it would affect the prospects of the person next in seniority, as it were. We think that to lay down a hard and fast rule such as this in the terms of an Act of Parliament is a little hard and does unduly hamper the future Indian Ministry, either at the Centre or in the Provinces. We think, therefore, that Sub-section (1) of this Clause ought not to be entertained. The exception, of course, is provided for here that in the case of a Federal Government it can be abolished with the consent of the Governor-General exercising his individual judgment, and in the case of a Provincial
Government by the Governor exercising his individual judgment. That is to say that, although the Ministry at the Centre recommends the Governor-General to do this, not to fill up a post in this instance, he is not obliged to do it, and so the Ministry is to that degree restricted in the measure of freedom which it can exercise.

3.5 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: After the explanation that I shall give I hope that the hon. Member will not feel it necessary to press this Amendment. The Clause deals with existing officials in these various classes. Many of them will be Indians. It was felt, quite rightly, that in a case of existing officials they ought to be guaranteed from their careers being disadvantaged in the same way as we guarantee officials in the other services. That being so, there must be a discretion left somewhere for giving compensation in the event of appointments being abolished on a large scale and the officials careers being as a consequence seriously damaged. The speech of the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Mr. M. Jones) has confirmed me in my view that the way to deal with that situation is the way proposed in this Clause. The lion. Member himself said that you could not have a rigid rule for compensation. I agree. This proposal does not make a rigid rule for compensation. It gives a discretionary power to deal with cases of this kind. Cases of this kind can only be dealt with upon the individual merits of each case. It is impossible for us here and now to lay it down that the abolition of this or that post ought to involve with it the compensation of this or that individual official.

Mr. JONES: I have expressed no objection at all to compensation where a post is abolished. There is no reference to compensation here. The question is as to freedom to abolish a post.

Sir S. HOARE: I was widening the scope of my answer. Just as in the ease of the services, where we are keeping control over the abolition of existing posts, so we feel that in these services we ought to keep similar control over existing officials. That does not tie the Government from making new arrangements for the future,
but it does safeguard the position of existing officials in accordance with what, they regard as their contract of service. This is the procedure we have adopted for the Secretary of State's services, and I think it is necessary to adopt it also for these services.

3.9 p.m.

Mr. H. WILLIAMS: I understand, Mr. Chairman, that you are not likely to call an Amendment which I have on the Paper, in page 137, line 17, to leave out "exercising his individual judgment" and to insert "in his discretion". Possibly the Secretary of State would consider this point. This Clause contemplates cases where for one reason or another jobs are to be abolished and the existing holders may be adversely affected. Quite properly the Secretary of State desires to protect them. The Ministers tender advice and the Governor-General or the Governor can refuse to accept that advice. If this Measure is to come into operation we all desire that causes of friction between a Minister and a Governor-General should be reduced to the minimum. Therefore, I believe that the words his individual judgment" should appear in the Bill as seldom as possible. Where a final decision lies with the Governor-General or the Governor of a Province it is better that it should be "in his discretion" and not "in the exercise of his individual judgment." Suppose that the ministers concerned think that some post ought to be abolished. Suppose that Ministers are induced for some reason not of the highest to take that point of view. Let us be frank and admit that all Ministers are from time to time subject to pressure. Suppose that constituency pressure or communal pressure is brought to bear upon Ministers and it is desired to "get at" Mr. So-and-so, and therefore there is a proposal that the post held by Mr. So-and-so should be abolished. We are only dealing with existing posts. It seems to me better that those cases should be taken away from the purview of Ministers, officially at any rate.
There will still be cases of informal discussions between the Governor-General or the Governor and the Ministers, at least in a good government there would be such discussions. But there is all the difference in the world between an
informal conversation and a formal tendering of advice, and it is where advice is tendered formally and then rejected that friction will be caused under the new Constitution. In a case where a Governor-General or a Governor is deliberately taking steps to protect an official against what he regards as an improper attack by a Minister, there is the kind of thing which is going to cause friction. This is a transitional Clause, and after a certain number of years it will cease to have any significance. During that transitional period it would be a good thing if these causes of friction did not arise and I ask the Secretary of State to consider the possibility, in the case both of the Centre and the Provinces—because the argument is equally valid as applied to both—that the words 'used should be "in his discretion" and not "in the exercise of his individual judgment."

3.13 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: I take a somewhat different view from that just expressed by the hon. Member for South Croydon (Mr. H. Williams). I do not think that consultation with a Minister in cases of this kind is likely to lead to more friction. It is likely, rather, to lead to less friction. In cases of this kind the practical proposal is bound to come up through the Minister. I cannot conceive a proposal for the abolition of a post or, it might be, several posts coming up in any other way. If, in practice, the proposal is bound to come from the Minister it is better frankly to accept the fact and I would go so far as to say to welcome the fact, that it should come up as the Minister's opinion. As a result there is much less likelihood of friction than there would be if the Governor attempted to take action without consulting Ministers at all.

3.14 p.m.

Mr. COCKS: The Sub-section covers a wider ground than that suggested by the hon. Member for South Croydon (Mr. H. Williams). It covers not only cases in which the abolition of a post would cause disadvantage to the occupant of that post, but cases in which abolition of a post would adversely affect some junior officer who might in the course of years expect to reach that post. It seems a very wide power to give to the Governor-General or
Governor. It means that if a re-organisation of services were desired on grounds of economy or because there was a superfluity of posts he could prevent it as long as there was somebody in that service who might expect in 30 or 40 years time to occupy one of those posts. I do not know where that principle comes from. Surely it is not a principle known to this country. If it were, it would mean that the Board of Admiralty, for instance, would not be able to cut down the number of admirals as it sometimes doest because there was a midshipman in the Navy who might rise to that position in a certain number of years' time. Nobody would ever think of compensating the midshipman in such a case for loss of his prospective advancement. We know very well that if services are re-organised there are some who will get disappointment. That is one of the disappointments to which all human beings are liable in this very uncertain, changeable, and disappointing world, but people have to put up with it. If the Ministers think that certain posts should be abolished, I think the Government should accept their opinion. I am not saying that people should not be compensated, but I am saying that reorganisation should not be prevented on those very wide grounds.

Amendment negatived.

3.17 p.m.

Mr. BUTLER: I beg to move, in page 137, line 10, after "II", to insert: "a Railway Service Class I, a Railway Service Class II."
This Amendment and the next one which I shall move are purely drafting Amendments. The reason we are including them here is that railway services are classified under a separate set of rules from those of a central service proper, and therefore it is more accurate to refer to them in this way.

Amendment agreed to.

Further Amendment made: In line 24, after "I", insert
to a Railway Service Class I" —[ Mr. Butler.]

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Clause, as amended, stand part of the Bill."

Mr. MORGAN JONES: May we have a reply from the Government on the point put by my hon. Friend the Member for Broxstowe (Mr. Cocks) with regard to
Sub-section (1) of this Clause? What precedent is there for this provision for safeguarding the prospective advancement of some junior person some 30 or 40 years hence, as is obviously implied in this Sub-section?

3.18 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: It always has been, or at least it has been for many years, a principle of Indian government. I suppose it came about as a result of the big changes that have taken place. I think the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Mr. Morgan Jones) will agree that, supposing the whole of the superior persons in a particular service had been abolished, they would obtain compensation. That shows that we must deal with these cases on the merits of each case. I would agree with him that it would be altogether illegitimate for some newly joined official to obtain compensation because six posts at the top of the service had been abolished. You have to judge, on the merits of each particular case, whether, in the first place, the official has been damaged and, secondly, whether his damage has been of such a kind as to be susceptible to compensation. That is the way in which we are working in the Secretary of State's services, and in the condition contemplated, namely, that there may be changes in the near or distant future, there is bound to be a principle of this kind.

3.20 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: I can understand that in individual cases there should be compensation, but that is not quite the point which we are raising. The point is the freedom of the Government to reorganise if they see fit. I know from my own experience that if the headship of a department becomes vacant, the next person in the department does not always get it. If the head of the Treasury becomes vacant it does not follow that the next person succeeds. We often transfer a person. Why, therefore, is it assumed that the second person in seniority has automatically some sort of claim to the reversion of the post? Surely that is very hampering to the Government when they approach the problem of re-organisation in order to
get better government. We still maintain our objection to the Sub-section, although we cannot carry it to a Division.

3.22 p.m.

Mr. H. WILLIAMS: Owing to the absence of some of my friends, the Amendment which you called, Sir Dennis, was not moved. It was in page 137, line 34, at the end, to insert:
(3) If by reason of anything done under this section any person mentioned therein is adversely affected in any way such person or his representatives shall be entitled to receive from the revenues of the Federation or as the case may be, the revenues of a Province such compensation as the Governor-General in his discretion or, as the case may be, the Governor in his discretion may consider just and equitable.
(4) Any sum payable under this section from the revenues of the Federation or the revenues of, a Province shall be charged on the revenues of the Federation or, as the case may be, that Province.
I would like to ask the Secretary of State what is in contemplation in connection with this Clause. I was somewhat impressed by the remarks of the hon. Member for Broxtowe (Mr. Cocks). There are two distinct issues in this Clause, namely, the position of a man holding a post which is abolished, and the heirship to that post, as it were. They are two different categories. If a man takes a post he may have hopes that he will reach an exalted position, but if the position is abolished and he cannot get there, he has no grievance unless there is some contract. That is one of the chances that has to be taken in life. On the other hand, I am not clear from the Clause what happens to the man who is the holder of an existing past. Those who take part in these Debates must from time to time make mistakes, because this Bill is so great that it is almost impossible for any of us to keep in our minds all the various Clauses, and it may be that under some other Clause there is protection for such people.
If this Amendment had been moved, we should have had from the Secretary of State an explanation of what will happen to the people who are what I call legitimately prejudiced, as distinct from those mentioned by the hon. Member for Broxtowe, who are what I would call very remotely prejudiced. If, as a result of an international conference, we built no more battleships of 25,000 tons, it would mean that no midshipman could
ever command a battleship of that size, but he would have no grievance, because policy had decided that there should be no more battleships of that size. There is a difference between (men hoping for promotion six months hence and the lately joined recruit who would not have got to a high post for 25 years more. I would like the Secretary of State to tell us, assuming this Act comes into operation while he is still Secretary of State and therefore in a position to deal with the Governor-General or the Governor when they are acting in their discretion, and the rest of it, exactly how he thinks this will work out. I know that what he says is not binding, but it will nevertheless be an indication of what is intended in practice by this Clause.

3.25 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: There are, generally speaking, two classes of officials. In the case of the Secretary of State's services the Secretary of State will have to take each case on its merits and give compensation with the concurrence of his service advisers. In the other cases, I imagine the Federal Government will adopt the same principle, and under Sub-section (3) of Clause 238 we give them the power to take this course. Sub-section (3) of Clause 238 together with this Clause which we are now considering and under which we are giving protection to existing holders, will, I am informed, make suitable provision.

Mr. WILLIAMS: It is not votable expenditure under Clause 238.

Sir S. HOARE: I am not sure whether it would be non-votable expenditure under Clause 238, because it would emanate from the Federal Government, but Clause 238, together with Clause 247 —Clause 247 making the position of existing holders secure—does, I think, make the position quite safe.

Question, "That the Clause, as amended, stand part of the Bill," put, and agreed to.

Clause 248 ordered to stand part of the Bill.

CLAUSE 249.—(General provisions as to persons retiring before commencement of Part III.)

3.27 p.m.

Mr. BUTLER: I beg to move, in page 138, line 26, after "who," to insert:
having been appointed to a civil service of, or a civil post, under the Crown in India.
This is a drafting Amendment. In its present form Sub-section (1) might be held to refer to military pensioners who, in fact, are covered by Clause 226.

Amendment agreed to.

Mr. BUTLER: I beg to move, in page 133, line 30, at the end, to insert:
and in any other case shall he paid out of the revenues of the Federation.
This Amendment is moved to make it clear that if a pension is not payable out of the revenues of a Province it will be payable out of the revenues of the Federation.

Amendment agreed to.

Further Amendment made: In page 138, line 33, leave out "or".—[Mr. Butler.]

Mr. BUTLER: I beg to move, in page 138, line 34, after "II." to insert:
a Railway Service Class I, or a Railway Service Class II.
Railway services are classified separately from the Central Services proper, and it is more accurate to refer to them as distinct services.

Amendment agreed to.

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Clause, as amended, stand part of the Bill."

Mr. G. NICHOLSON: About the creation of the new Provinces of Orissa and Sind—

Sir S. HOARE: That does not come in under this Clause.

3.30 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: As this Clause refers to pensions may I ask two questions? One refers to proportionate pensions, that is, the pensions of men who retire before the normal period of service is completed. Could the hon. Gentleman give a clear statement as to whether it will be possible for a man now in the Service to retire on a proportionate pension up to and including a certain date. A question was put down to this effect two weeks ago, and the answer which was given seemed to mean that the right was to be conferred only upon people who had been in the Service some years ago. I put down a further question, and was referred to the former
answer. Many people would be glad to hear a clear statement on the subject. We cannot forget that on or about the day on which the White Paper was published, in March, 1933, a statement was made by my right hon. Friend on this subject, and was understood as conferring the right upon officers now in the Service and up to some date to be fixed. I understand that there is considerable doubt among those officers as to what the statement exactly means. The Joint Select Committee made no recommendation on the subject. The other day I put a question—

The CHAIRMAN: I am not quite sure that the Secretary of State ought to answer the question. I have no objection to his doing so, but I do not think that it arises on the Clause.

Duchess of ATHOLL: I am sorry. May I put the question? The point has been raised to-day in regard to security of pension—

Sir S. HOARE: It does not come in here.

Duchess of ATHOLL: May I ask if the Secretary of State will say a word on the question I have put to him?

3.32 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: I am perfectly ready, with your approval Sir Dennis, to answer it now, although I do not think it has anything to do with the Clause. Retirement pension would be open to all officials serving before the Constitution Act comes into operation and to new recruits, until the contemplated inquiry proposed changes and those changes are sanctioned by Parliament.

Duchess of ATHOLL: The changes meaning as to the Secretary of State relinquishing his authority.

Sir S. HOARE: The changes contemplated in the inquiry in Clause 251, namely, the inquiry into the future of the Services generally at some unspecified date in the future.

Duchess of ATHOLL: Thank you.

Question, "That the Clause, as amended, stand part of the Bill ", put, and agreed to.

CLAUSE 250—(Secretary of State to act with approval of his advisers.)

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Clause stand part of the Bill."

3.34 p.m.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: Can the Secretary of State tell us precisely what are the functions of the advisers referred to in the Clause? Secondly, what is the constitution of this body of advisers? Is there a proportion of Indians and of Britishers? Is any departure implied in the Clause from the practice which has been followed hitherto in this matter?

Sir S. HOARE: The Chapter which deals with the Secretary of State and his advisers begins with Clause 264 and as it deals with the duties of the Council, perhaps we had better not discuss it. Speaking generally, it is contemplated that the advisers would supervise the Services just as they do now.

Mr. JONES: This is rather important. Do I understand that as things are now these advisers can veto any proposal by the Secretary of State in regard to the Service questions which are involved in this Clause?

Sir S. HOARE: Yes, he has to obtain their advice—by a majority.

Mr. H. WILLIAMS: As this is the first Clause which brings in the question of the advisers of the Secretary of State, I should like to develop just a little further the argument raised by the hon. Member for Caerphilly (Mr. M. Jones). I will not go very far. Unless we make a challenge here, we shall have lost our rights in respect of this Chapter. Obviously it would be improper for me to discuss now the full significance of Clause 264, but the Committee should realise that, in passing this Clause, we may in part invalidate the other provisions of the Chapter if by chance the advisers appointed by the Secretary of State happen to take a point of view fundamentally different from his. Of course, the Secretary of State appoints them, but, although the Secretary of State is a permanent institution, the individual holder of that office may be a changing person. Moreover, it is not a question of an actual majority, because, in one sense, the Secretary of State has a casting vote, since, under Clause 264 (7), all that is necessary is that at least half
his advisers should agree with him. Again, I understand that these persons are irremovable. I want to know what is the significance of what we are doing. Supposing that we pass this Chapter and the Secretary of State can do all these things, and that we then find that he cannot do them unless he gets the concurrence of half his advisers, if he does not get the concurrence of half his advisers all the safeguards may crash.

Sir S. HOARE: No.

Mr. WILLIAMS: It is conceivable that that may happen, and there is no power of over-riding it, because the appointments of these persons must run for five years, unless they resign or become incapable or infirm. I want the Committee to realise how far we are going in passing this Clause to-day. I challenge it now, but we shall be able to discuss the question properly when we get to Clause 264.

3.37 p.m.

Sir S. HOARE: My hon. Friend, no doubt unwittingly, has put a very curious construction on Clause 250. This is regarded as one of the principal Service safeguards, and I have been pressed to retain it by almost every representation that I have had from the Services. The Services regard it as a great safeguard that one-half of the Secretary of State's Council should be civilians, and that the Secretary of State in Service matters—such, for instance, as the question of the changing of the rules affecting the Services—should be forced to have the concurrence of the Council with him. I hope that this explanation will remove my hon. Friend's anxiety.

Question, "That the Clause stand part of the Bill," put, and agreed to.

CLAUSE 251.—(Power by Order in Council to transfer certain powers of Secretary of State.)

Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Clause stand part of the Bill."

3.38 p.m.

Duchess of ATHOLL: This Clause is one of very great importance. I do not know whether the Commiteee quite realise its bearings, but it is clear, from the reply which my right hon. Friend gave me to a question that I put to him
on another Clause, that this is the Clause which enables action to be taken under an Order in Council following an inquiry as to whether and to what extent the Secretary of State should retain his powers of recruitment for the Indian Civil Service, the Police, and the Indian Medical Service. We have to remember that in the White Paper there was a proviso that after five years such an inquiry should be held, and that proviso caused very great anxiety, because there was no guarantee of the continuance, for more than five years from the passing of the Constitution Act, of the Secretary of State's powers of recruitment for these important Services. The Joint Select Committee were so far impressed by the importance of the Secretary of State retaining his power of recruitment for these Services that they recommended that the inquiry should not be held at any specific date, but that it should not be before the expiry of five years. It is clear, from what my right hon. Friend has just said, that the Government regard themselves as bound to hold such an inquiry, and the Clause enables the Crown, under an Order in Council, should the result of the inquiry justify it, to require the Secretary of State to transfer to some body in India the powers of recruitment for the Indian Civil Service, the Police, and the Indian Medical Service which he retains under Clause 233. There is also a chance that he may do something to save his power of recruitment, for irrigation. He has promised to consider that matter and see what he can do. I think he realises the great importance of such recruitment to the welfare of the people of India.
Here we come to what have always been known as the security services—the Indian Civil Service, the Police and the Indian medical service, which mean so much to the welfare of the people. My right hon. Friend yesterday, when speaking on Clause 233, appeared to me very seriously to minimise the evidence that there is for the deterioration in the services which have already been transferred. I will not speak further on that subject than to remind the Committee that there is evidence in the Report of the Simon Commission as to the deterioration which has taken place in various services since their transfer.
Their committee on education recommended that one of the main ways to remedy that deterioration in education was to place British recruitment upon an unassailable basis. I only mention that as an illustration of results which have been officially shown to have followed on the cessation of British recruitment in the education service in the last nine years. An illustration of that sort gives us an idea of how much the efficiency of other services, and of the administration in general in India, is likely to deteriorate if British recruitment for the Indian Civil Service comes to an end, as is possible under this Clause at any time after five years from the Constitution Act coming into operation.
Then, I think, any of us who have read the evidence before the Joint Select Committee have been able to form some idea of the extent to which public security in India depends on the maintenance of a strong British element. Yet if enquiry seems to justify it the Secretary of State will be able to transfer the entire recruitment of the police. Those who have read the evidence of medical witnesses before the Joint Committee will remember how they stressed the deterioration which has resulted from a steady diminution in the number of British officers. Therefore, this is a very serious matter, and I think we have to take note of the fact that antagonism to British members of the Indian Civil Service has been shown by some Indian politicians. Consequently, once a clause of this kind is put on the Statute Book, and in view of the statements in the White Paper and the Report of the Joint Select Committee, it will not be surprising if there is a great deal of pressure on the Government of India to get the Government at home to relinquish this power at the earliest possible moment, or, at any rate, steadily to diminish the power of the Secretary of State to recruit to the services.
When the question of the value of British recruitment to this service was raised, I think in 1922, the right hon. Member for Carnarvon Boroughs (Mr. Lloyd George) referred to the services as the steel frame on which the whole structure of government and of administration in India rests. That was in the happy and spacious days before recruit-
ment for any of these services had been dropped. We already have considerable evidence, for those who take the trouble to look, of the loss of efficiency following on the diminution of the British element in the transferred departments. We have, therefore, every reason to feel the necessity for keeping the steel frame in the main security services and in the medical service in a country where there is a tremendous health problem, and I do beg of the Committee to realise the magnitude of the question raised by this Clause and the effect it is likely to have on the efficiency of administration and the general well-being of the people of India.

3.46 p.m.

Mr. H. WILLIAMS: When I first read this Clause, I was rather perturbed because it contemplates that all these protective powers, which we have given to the Secretary of State, may be handed over by some subsequent Government to some unspecified person. That rather alarmed me, but I imagine—and I should like to have the confirmation of the Secretary of State or of the UnderSecretary—that Clause 286 will, in fact, govern Clause 251. Here it says:
His Majesty in Council may transfer
But Orders-in-Council do not require the approval of this House. In order that there should be control it is proposed in Clause 286, not that the Order-in-Council should he approved, but that the draft should be approved, and that His Majesty should not take action except in pursuance of an Address from both Houses of Parliament. So it is only fair to the Secretary of State to say that Clause 251 cannot be operative unless with the concurrence of both Houses of Parliament. Nevertheless, we do not know what will be the future of another place, and still less are we certain what will be the constitution of this House. The other place has rather lost faith in itself and seems to be only too willing to pass all sorts of things which it ought to reject. I contemplate the time when there may be an administration, represented rather more numerously by the party opposite than is at present the case, sitting on this side of the Chamber, proposing the transfer of all these powers to somebody in India or to somebody who is not of European origin. This is not ruled out as I see the position. The
whole of these protective powers which are given to the Secretary of State may possibly be handed over by a future Government to the very people against whom, by giving the Secretary of State these powers, we are seeking to protect the Civil Service in India. Though nothing serious is likely to happen immediately, it may later on be a very great danger to the good government of India.
I frankly regret that the Clause should be in the Bill. I think that, if it was ever contemplated that these powers should be transferred to the Secretary of State or to anybody else, an Act of Parliament ought to be introduced and ought to jump over all the different hurdles. There is all the difference between the two means. There is the possibility of giving up a day in each House and the automatic majority coming into operation at the end of the day. That is one proposal. It is an entirely different thing when the Bill has to run consecutively—a Second Reading, Committee stage and possibly Amendments, and, if Amendments, a Report stage, and the Third Reading—with the same process in the other House, with possibly a great measure of agitation in the country during the rather long process. That is an entirely different thing from simply passing a Resolution in both Houses of Parliament. Therefore, the Committee ought to give very careful consideration to this Clause which seems to be a most amazing and unnecessary Clause, I think that with great advantage it might be left out of the Bill. I am sorry that more of us have not taken an active interest in this Clause before to-day. I confess that I had not realised its full implications before. It seems to me a most dangerous Clause and I hope that the Committee will give careful consideration to it before it stands part of the Bill.

Mr. CHURCHILL: Are we not to have a reply from the Secretary of State?

Sir S. HOARE: I am waiting until the case has been fully stated.

Mr. CHURCHILL: The case has been fully stated, and I think we ought to have a reply from the Secretary of State.

Sir S. HOARE: Two or three hon. Members. Rose

3.51 p.m.

Mr. WISE: I want to express my agreement with the hon. Member for Croydon, South (Mr. H. Williams) that this is a most dangerous Clause. In it we are giving power to His Majesty, by Order in Council, to remove all the safeguards to which apparently the Government now attach so much importance. Every single power of the Secretary of State can be removed without proper consultation. It does not give any security to the new constitution that we are setting up. It is possible for a Socialist administration—my hon. Friends opposite will forgive me for saying that the Socialist Administration would be a reckless one—by Order in Council to hand over the power of appointment to a body like the Congress party. The Clause says, "any authority." There is very little doubt, and I hope that hon. Members opposite will confirm me in this, that the party opposite if they had the authority would hand over all the powers at once to some authority in India. All the speeches that they have made hitherto on the Bill indicate that that is their object. They are in favour of complete self-government for the Indian Empire, a self-government which is not contemplated in the present Bill.
They have also told us with commendable frankness that any idea that we may have had in the past about continuity of policy can now be regarded as null and void. They do not propose to exercise continuity of policy in any branch of Government and particularly not in the case of India. Therefore, I hope the Secretary of State will consider what a dangerous weapon he is leaving behind in this Clause. It may be possible to amend it, although I do not see how any Amendment is going to make the Clause sufficiently harmless to commend it to those who are of the same views as myself. I cannot see what is the point of giving all these powers to the Secretary of State unless there is some reason for it now. One presumes that it is considered that the Secretary of State is the only fit person to exercise them. What is the point of giving him these powers if at any moment there is power, simply by advising His Majesty, to transfer all the things that are now considered to be essential now to keep. I cannot see the sense or logic in it.
I hope that we shall get a, reassuring explanation from the right hon. Gentleman, although I do not see how he can reassure us. He will only be able to say that he does not contemplate any administration in this country ever being foolish enough to hand over all these powers. If he does not contemplate any such administration being foolish enough, why give them the power to do it? If the Secretary of State is right it is unnecessary to give these powers because no one will ever want to exercise them, and if anyone does want to exercise these powers we can be pretty sure that they will be exercised wrongly. The Committee will be well advised to read the clause carefully and find out how much we are abandoning if we pass it. I hope that some of those who are the most fervent supporters of the Government and the Bill will carefully study the clause before we meet again on Monday and realise that they cannot, in fact, continue their blind support of the Bill any longer. If the Secretary of State sees signs of the great anxiety which exists he may perhaps graciously give way on this point. He has been more conciliatory during the last few days and I hope that it is an indication of future benefits.

3.57 p.m.

Lord E. PERCY: I appeal to the Secretary of State to withdraw the Clause or allow it to be rejected. There are, of course, none of the sinister intentions prescribed to it, it is merely the familiar instance of the draftsmen putting into a new Bill an existing provision of an old Act. The Secretary of State under the existing Government of India Act has these powers already; this is merely copied from the old law. But, in the new situation, when we are making this new staff and gone out of our way to say that the whole question shall not be prejudiced, and that when it is reconsidered in the future it shall be reconsidered with full liberty of action, it is obvious that it is a thoroughly bad policy to put
again into this Bill this old Clause; although the Secretary of State has these powers already.

3.58 p.m.

Marquess of HARTINGTON: I hope that we shall not pass the Clause before the Secretary of State has had an opportunity of explaining fully exactly what purpose it serves and why it is in the Bill. We have devoted some time to a discussion of the various safeguards in the Bill to which, rightly, great importance is attached by those whom they concern, but if I understand the Clause it will make these safeguards of no effect. If a Government comes into office which holds different views on this question then the whole of the safeguards become of no account whatever.

Mr. MORGAN JONES: Yes, hamstring the next Government if you can.

Marquess of HARTINGTON: I have no knowledge what the next Government will be, and I am opposed, on principle, to cruelty to animals. There is no question of hamstringing the next Government. All that is suggested is that if these enormous powers are to be given they should be conferred only after proper deliberation by Parliament.

It being Four o'clock The CHAIRMAN left the Chair to make his Report to the House.

Committee report Progress; to sit again upon Monday next.

The remaining Government Orders were read, and postponed.

Whereupon Mr. SPEAKER adjourned the House without Question put, pursuant to Standing Order No. 2.

Adjourned at One Minute after Four o'Clock until Monday next, 8th April.